Definitive. =D>dgrosky wrote:The fact is Lewis Hamilton is a very talented driver. He is however young and inexperienced. If you listened to the way he talks and what he has to say you really get the sense that he is immature. Read his auto biography and you will know what I am talking about. The fact he wrote it in the first place is presumptuous. All LH has to do is accept himself and not try to be or act like something greater than what he is. I feel that the reason he makes so many bad mistakes is he because he loses focus due to his mind wandering and starting to dream of the glorious accomplishments that will come his way. Then suddenly boom you’re off in the pit lane gravel when the championship was in your grasp or 'I can’t believe I hit that button on my steering wheel' and lose 10 places, or 'why are these two cars not moving in front of me' and whack! I get the sense that LH is always trying to be something other than who he is when he talks, always trying to say the right things. This is why Kimi is so likeable for Ferrari and non Ferrari fans alike. Kimi is just Kimi he never tries to be anything more or less. He started racing at a relatively late age, he is diverse and talented in other activities. Not afraid to just be himself (Think Gorilla suit). Perhaps it is because LH was bred by his father and Mclaren at a young age to be a race driver that he somehow loses sight on reality. Perhaps a bit too pampered, a kind of prima donna. I want to like this guy, he is ultra talented, but until he matures a little I just can’t. Maybe all these seemingly dumb errors he makes will make him realize that he is not all great. Maybe that it will toughen him up. Make him a man. And then he can become the great champion he dreams of being. But until this happens he just comes off as a 'wiener' even when he is atop the podium. And I just can’t stand watching him, or his daddy at every race.
I think it all comes down to weak personal management. AH is not an experienced manager. He is probably flying by the seat of his pants. He may also be caught up in his son's dreams that he himself has no cold, objective advice to give his son. So many young talents from the past who have had weak management have floundered from one bad publicity story to another. AH definitely has his son's best intentions in mind and you cannot fault him for trying, but at the end of the day it would be difficult to separate business from emotion. It might be difficult to tell your son to be humble and contrite especially to a rival and not feel your son is groveling.dgrosky wrote:The fact is Lewis Hamilton is a very talented driver. He is however young and inexperienced. If you listened to the way he talks and what he has to say you really get the sense that he is immature. Read his auto biography and you will know what I am talking about. The fact he wrote it in the first place is presumptuous. All LH has to do is accept himself and not try to be or act like something greater than what he is. I feel that the reason he makes so many bad mistakes is he because he loses focus due to his mind wandering and starting to dream of the glorious accomplishments that will come his way. Then suddenly boom you’re off in the pit lane gravel when the championship was in your grasp or 'I can’t believe I hit that button on my steering wheel' and lose 10 places, or 'why are these two cars not moving in front of me' and whack! I get the sense that LH is always trying to be something other than who he is when he talks, always trying to say the right things. This is why Kimi is so likeable for Ferrari and non Ferrari fans alike. Kimi is just Kimi he never tries to be anything more or less. He started racing at a relatively late age, he is diverse and talented in other activities. Not afraid to just be himself (Think Gorilla suit). Perhaps it is because LH was bred by his father and Mclaren at a young age to be a race driver that he somehow loses sight on reality. Perhaps a bit too pampered, a kind of prima donna. I want to like this guy, he is ultra talented, but until he matures a little I just can’t. Maybe all these seemingly dumb errors he makes will make him realize that he is not all great. Maybe that it will toughen him up. Make him a man. And then he can become the great champion he dreams of being. But until this happens he just comes off as a 'wiener' even when he is atop the podium. And I just can’t stand watching him, or his daddy at every race.
Bizadfar, I think you've gotten the wrong end of the stick, I never complained that they shouldn't be racing out of the pits. In fact I LIKE to see that, I think its a particularly exciting part of the racing.Spencer, "had they not been racing out the pits"
Seriously, FO man, this is racing, this is what we want. ffs...
At no point did I intend to try and "take responsibility away from hamilton" Chris, if I did so then I apologise for not making my feeling clearer. As I said above I feel all the blame lies with Hamilton. (Although I do still think that in ALL cirmumstances like this the team should be on the radio - at the end of the day though reponsibility for obeying a red light lies with the person behind the wheel) And I never tried to distribute the blame to those commiting previous offences.Conceptual wrote:But it is ok to take responsibility from your favorite driver and dilute it amongst other drivers from other times, Spence... I remember you doing something similar during the Stepney-gate saga.
Taking responsibility by pointing out others mistakes is a childs game. I commend you on your proficiency at it, it shows a lifelong commitment to perecting it!
regardless of who is right or wrong this is a very good point. I hope that others will support this. I certainly do. everybody is entitled to his opinion and it never hurts to put it down in writing. sometimes we learn a whole lot by defending our opinions. some have the honesty to admit when they were wrong and thats great to see. some just quietly take the learning away and do not talk about it. that is also ok in my view. we should not aim to have uniform opinions but a high standard of intellectual honesty. if someone is having unpopular opinions but great fairness in discussion I do appreciate this more than someone telling me I'm right. always attack the post, never the poster.Spencifer_Murphy wrote:...The whole point in a forum is that people can express their own opinions, and we have a right to do so, but lets be civil please. I don't participate in many forums because they are full of people who do nothing but throw insuts at eachother, this forum has always been, and I hope always will be, different than that. ....
I may or may not agree with the rest of your post, but, like you, I don't understand why the engineer isn't shouting to Lewis (or whoever) "watch out the lights!". We had Montoya black-flagged in 2005, and then Massa and Fisi black-flagged too in 2007. And then in 2008 we have the collisions of Rosberg and Hamilton, which would have been black-flagged otherwise. I understand the engineers are constantly reminding the drivers of the formation lap routine (i.e. heat the tires, engine map X, fuel mixture y, differential setting z...). So, if I were the track engineer of anybody, I'd sure be telling him "lights may be red, possible cars stopped on the pitlane exit". And not once or twice. Because it has happened more than once or twice.Spencifer_Murphy wrote:Although I do still think that in ALL cirmumstances like this the team should be on the radio - at the end of the day though reponsibility for obeying a red light lies with the person behind the wheel
Doesn't TF1 already have the F1 rights in France? Living near the border, we usually switch to french coverage when Tele5 goes to advertising, although it could be another french channel (not Antenne 2). In any case, as you mentioned, last race wasn't broadcast live, so we switched to german RTL. Also, does eurosport really broadcast F1 races? Is it everywhere or does it depend on the country?Vyselegend wrote: The TV TF1 channel is buying exclusive F1 rights for France, just to prevent people from watching it.
I'm sorry, WhiteBlue, but I don't really understand what you are trying to say here. I've never watched TV through the net. Does it require any kind of P2P-like data sharing? Video streaming is otherwise pretty straightforward, and works fine in free software such as VLC (good for us penguin people).WhiteBlue wrote:Internet based access will necessarily increase with broadband booming. one of the concerns there is the vulnerability to viruses when the firwall is becoming more like a camouflage net due to the P2p software.