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Rowing Across the Atlantic

An Anonymous Coward writes: "Wired News has an article about 68 men and women who are rowing across the Atlantic. "All 34 boats in this year's race are equipped with Global Positioning System (GPS) devices, and practically all the rowers have satellite phones and other wireless gadgets with Internet access.""

49 of 102 comments (clear)

  1. Why Start In Winter? - And Why Sporting News on /. by Ieshan · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What's the purpose of starting in winter? Or are they rowing in the Southern Hemisphere? Even so, this seems like a stupid idea.

    Rowing over a major ocean during the end of storm season through winter is the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard of. I wish they would think before they do stuff like this.

    But I suppose the contestants, I suppose that's what you'd call them, get some sort of rush out of doing crap like this. I just don't understand what kind of rush it is.

    Furthermore, I don't understand why sporting news belongs on /., but that's another story.

  2. Hmm, a great feat, yes by imrdkl · · Score: 1

    But do the GPS and gadgets make it newsworthy? Perhaps the map-reading and navigation skills necessary? Maybe it's the strong and hearty people?

    1. Re:Hmm, a great feat, yes by Kwikymart · · Score: 1

      Yes, and everyone knows that /. reports on international sporting events! Look out espn!

      --

      Buying a Dell computer is equivalent to dropping the soap in a prison shower.
  3. Wireless gadgets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    and practically all the rowers have satellite phones and other wireless gadgets with Internet access

    Good ! they can read slashdot !

  4. A friend did this by Tri0de · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A friend at my old gym (Andrew Halsey) did this. Wanted to point out what an epileptic could do. Of course somebody asked what should happen if had a seizure; his reply (thick Brit Accent)well then I'd make some bloody good time then.." I remember his GPS was a unit aout the size of a briefcase.

    --
    "Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but not their own facts."
  5. Wireless access - by mummers · · Score: 1

    Can someone please give me the contract to supply these guys with 802.11b wireless kit?

    Hmmm, just think of all those floating wireless access points...the ultimate roving (rowing?) LAN.

    --
    --This isn't a man who is leaving with his head between his legs.
  6. Gulf stream. by VA+Software · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The race began Oct. 7 at Los Gigantes Harbor in Tenerife, Spain, and ends in Port St. Charles, Barbados.

    Is there a good reason they're rowing against the gulf stream and the prevailing winds?

    As if rowing across the atlantic isn't hard enough already

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    1. Re:Gulf stream. by imrdkl · · Score: 1

      Maybe it's not supposed to be easy. Maybe it's supposed to be fun! those jocks... heh. anything for a thrill. oooh.

    2. Re:Gulf stream. by tiny69 · · Score: 2
      Is there a good reason they're rowing against the gulf stream and the prevailing winds?
      I don't know what you are thinking, but the Gulf Stream runs along the North American continent. The actual course that the rowers will take goes no where near the Gulf Stream. And yes, they will be going with the prevailing winds and currents.

      This map shows the courses that rowers took during a similar race in 1997.
      http://www.challengebusiness.com/row/tracking1997. htm
      --
      Go not unto/. for advice, for you will be told both yea and nay (but have nothing to do with the question)
    3. Re:Gulf stream. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      They're not rowing against the Gulf Stream or against the prevailing winds. The Gulf Stream flows North up the western Atlantic (North American East Coast) and West across the North Atlantic. Since the race is from Spain to the Caribbean, the Gulf Stream won't affect the rowers. The prevailing winds, the Trade Winds, in the East and Mid Atlantic blow in a Westerly direction this time of year. That's why they're starting now. Even if they don't row, they'll eventually be blown to Barbados. Hurricane season has also passed, so it's fairly safe.

      The same conditions that dictate that the race should be done in this season made it inevitable that Columbus would get to America and powered the sailing ship trade by between the Europe, the Caribbean and the Colonies.

    4. Re:Gulf stream. by mother_superius · · Score: 1

      Well, that's what the trial will attempt to determine.

    5. Re:Gulf stream. by mother_superius · · Score: 1

      Yeah; exactly. If he's so guilty, then put him in a court of law. If the government puts up even a small fraction of the evidence they claim to have, it should be more than enough to convict him.

  7. Overboard! by Asahi+Super+Dry · · Score: 3, Interesting

    According to the article, some of the rowers are opting to just toss their gadgets into the sea to reduce weight. I guess that says something about their actual utility.

    1. Re:Overboard! by bradipo · · Score: 1

      Or rather it shows that they may be getting some kind of sea sickness---imagine rowing across the ocean without any kind of navigation... I suppose if they know how to guide themselves with stars they may be ok.

  8. Big deal by banky · · Score: 1

    It's still a boat. When someone bicycles across, call me.

    --
    ZOMG I WOULD LOVE TO KNOW ABOUT YOUR FEELINGS ON MACINTOSH VERSUS WINDOWS, VI VERSUS EMACS, AND HOW YOU'RE NOT A DORK
    1. Re:Big deal by VA+Software · · Score: 2, Funny

      Some one crossed the English channel on a tricycle in 1883

      The 1823 duck hunting machine from England (on the same page) is brilliant.

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  9. But do they have OnStar? by Wordsmith · · Score: 3, Funny

    They'll need OnStar if they want ads to notify them of all the great sites around the Atlantic.

  10. Original Record by Overcoat · · Score: 3, Informative

    The original trans-Atlanitc rowing record (Canary Islands to Barbados in 41 days) was set by two New Zealanders, Phil Stubbs, and Robbie Hamill back in 1997. Their fully-laden boat weighed over 2000 pounds. Stubbs later died in a plane crash.

  11. Re:Should I be impressed? by nomadic · · Score: 3, Informative

    It sounds less impressive when you consider this guy did the same thing, only swimming.

  12. Ocean Rowing Society by Barnum · · Score: 5, Informative

    if you're interested in this sort of thing, I suggest you head over to OceanRowing.com. I worked for the director of the Ocean Rowing Society, Kenneth Crutchlow, for a year compiling metric assloads of data about every single ocean rower who ever attempted a crossing. It was definitely one of the strangest jobs I've ever held, but after spending so much time surrounded by this close knit community of people who want to test the limits of human endurance, you begin to understand what drives someone to want to do this. Every rower has their own personal drama to tell, and it is a riveting experience to hear them describe their lone rowboats amid 50 foot swells in mid-Atlantic hurricanes or having to jump out of their boat to spear fish when food runs out halfway across the Pacific.

    --
    I can't wait to eat that monkey...
  13. Amir Klink did it solo! by glgraca · · Score: 2, Informative

    A crazy Brazilian called Amir Klink rowed from Africa to Brazil by himself.

  14. Re:Should I be impressed? by Cirvam · · Score: 1

    yeah if he acutally was swimming the whole time. If you read his schedual he was swimming for 8 hours a day in 2 hour blocks. The rest of the time was spent on a ship. Also during inclement weather he rode and excercise cycle.

  15. Re:Should I be impressed? by nomadic · · Score: 2

    8 hours a day against open ocean currents and waves. I consider that impressive.

  16. wireless internet? by usernumber31337 · · Score: 3, Funny

    I can see it now:
    "Hey, why aren't you rowing?"
    "I'm posting to slashdot!"

    1. Re:wireless internet? by SEWilco · · Score: 1

      "I'm trying to get post #3,000,000!"

    2. Re: wireless internet? by elemental23 · · Score: 1

      That would be great! We could get a Slashdot interview while they're halfway across.

      --
      I like my women like my coffee... pale and bitter.
  17. all this tells us... by jeffy124 · · Score: 1

    ... is that it's possible to go take a vacation in a remote location to and still stay in touch with the rest of the world and know where you are. Somehow I picture that editorial cartoon with a guy on a beach receiving a fax. Is this story really all that big a deal from a technological standpoint?

    --
    The One Rule Of Chess You'll Ever Need: Don't play someone who carries a kit in their bookbag.
  18. What's with the interactive positions applet? by Kaa42 · · Score: 1

    Why does the people who wrote the interactive map applet on the site think that they need Full Permissions on my JVM? What file IO can they possibly need to do for example. Is it really that difficult to write the manifest to only request the permissions you really need?

    And why is it broadcasting UDP packets to 255.255.255.255 according to Tiny Personal Firewall? Is there something I don't realise about this or is the applet just doing funny stuff?

    --
    .oO Kaa Oo.
  19. Re: by jaavaaguru · · Score: 1

    > This isn't remarkably more dangerous
    > than sitting down at a Nautilus machine for
    > the equivalent ammount of time

    Wow! I never knew *Nautilus* was that dangerous!
    I'll be sticking to Konqueror from now on then.

  20. That's a long extension cord! by emag · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I know that my phone and other "electronic gadgets" tend to last a week with light-to-moderate usage. Either these folks are carrying some rather long extension cords, or have something else to recharge all their batteries.

    Either way, I can see why people are opting to toss stuff overboard, as I can't even begin to imagine the additional weight all those chargers would be adding...

    --
    "The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule." --H.L. Mencken
  21. Re:Why Start In Winter? - And Why Sporting News on by john@iastate.edu · · Score: 2
    ... I don't understand why sporting news belongs on /., ...

    Coming soon:

    Husker QB orders pizza using 802.11a during rout!

    Seriously though, I agree, just because some doofus has a <insert random e-gadget here> with them does not make it News for Nerds, blah blah, blah

    --
    Shut up, be happy. The conveniences you demanded are now mandatory. -- Jello Biafra
  22. Not about GPS and Satellite Phones... by DaoudaW · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While the rowers say they are grateful for the wireless perks like GPS and satellite phones, Vose says the gadgets are not giving the rowers an unfair advantage.

    Both Wired and Slashdot seem to emphasize the technology. This is an amazing, grueling physical trial. The tech is for us to follow them and rescue if necessary. Their main tech tool is the business end of an oar.

  23. AP today reports "Ireland Finds US Rowers Boat" by skippywalker · · Score: 2, Informative

    I just so happened to have spent a night in Kilkee, Ireland in late September on the night that "Retired Chcago cariologist Nenad Belic, 62, was trying to become the thir person to row a boat from Cape Cod to Europe when he ran into trouble in a storm."
    I don't know if GPS would have helped or not, I can attest to the storm that night. But more than a month later only boat turned up.

    --
    I'd buy that for a dollar. (canned laughter)
    1. Re:AP today reports "Ireland Finds US Rowers Boat" by SEWilco · · Score: 1
  24. Re:Why Start In Winter? - And Why Sporting News on by mindstrm · · Score: 2

    They are rowing, as the article says, from tenerife, spain, to barbados.

    That's a near tropical origin (30 degrees N, I think) and a very tropical destination.
    What *I* wanna know is, how do they shit?

  25. Re:I wonder... by BrianW · · Score: 1

    Why would anyone row on the soil?

  26. Free, as in Beer? by Mac+Beckett · · Score: 1

    Welcome to the Open Source Travel Agency...

  27. Well... by Pludodog · · Score: 1

    I think I speak for everyone when I say... Don't these people have anything better to do?

  28. Re:This line is a bit odd, isn't it? by Brian+Boitano · · Score: 1

    we don't say "circle jerk" in nz :P
    it'd be more like "soggy biscuit"

    --
    What would Brian Boitano do?
  29. And the Kiwis win again by fredm8 · · Score: 1

    Too bloody right mate. Us Kiwis prove how stupid we really are. Surrounded by water on all sides, we prove that we can conquer someone else's ocean too !!!!!

  30. Southern Hemisphere by sgups · · Score: 1

    Umm maybe u didnt read the article. It said Spain to Barbados. I dont think either lies in southern hemisphere. (Maybe barbados, not sure but I doubt it)

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  31. When I was a kid by sgups · · Score: 1

    When I was a kid we used magnetic compasses and stars to guide us...whats up with the fancy shmancy new fangled stuff

    --
    Democratic USA - Government of the corporations, by the Corporations, for the corporations.
  32. Rowing the Atlantic is not without danger ... by rigolo · · Score: 1

    Yesterday I read a news artical about a US doctor that tried to row from cape cod to Europe.

    On the 30th of september he went missing (story) and yesterday they found this boat of the coast of Ireland (story). He had all the electronic equipment that the participants of this race have .. but that did not help him ....

    You can see his progress on the Ocean Rowing Society web page until the 30rd of september. On their web site you can also find more information about his journey.

    His younger brother has created a web site with even more information

    So those who say that the electronic equipment makes it easier ... should think again

    Rigolo
  33. No Big News by CAIMLAS · · Score: 2
    This isn't such a big deal - it's simply a marketing ploy to sell more stuff to the masses. This feat was performed many times, over 700 years ago, by Norse explorers. This is without all the modern conveniences of GPS, the Internet - you name it.

    Panzies. :)

    --
    ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  34. SWIMMING across the atlantic... by Click+0+Nett · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A few years back a guy swam accross... He pushed a covered sled that had a bed, radio, GPS, etc... Took him about a month to get across. Sorry I dont have more info, does anybody remember this guy? He might be on the rowing team.

    --

    Like eagles on pogo-sticks! -- Glottis

  35. Losers! by letchhausen · · Score: 1

    What a bunch of pussies using phones and GPS. If it was a real challenge they would just set out and then we'd just wait till someone arrived. Gutless simps.

    --
    Hey, you think your house is cool?
  36. Amyr Klink was the first who did it. by jtoj · · Score: 1

    Amyr Klink was the first man to row across the Atlantic, ALONE -- no GPS, no Sat-Phone, no internet. Following the prevalent winds and the streams, of course. You can get one his books at Amazon. Very worth reading, he's a man who can make dreams come true. If you can read portuguese, go to: http://www.amyrklink.com.br and take a look at his newest boats and projects.

    --
    Jose T Oliveira Jr.
  37. Re:Why Start In Winter? - And Why Sporting News on by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1
    Why climb mountains?
    Why go parachuting?
    Why sail across the Atlantic?
    Why cross the Antartica?
    Why circumnavigate the globe on a plane?

    Besides. Maybe you should bother doing a bit or research before you make any claims about this event?

  38. Wave by axehind · · Score: 1

    I bet if the got wiped out by a rogue wave they would blame it on /bin/laden