Date: Sun, 10 Apr 1994 19:25:13 -1000 From: Darrin.Skinner@ebay.sun.com (Darrin Skinner) Message-Id: <9404112025.AA06237@stuntkite.EBay.Sun.COM> Organization: Division of Applied Sciences, Harvard University Subject: Re: Bicycle with a rev (Nomeclature) -] Date: Mon, 11 Apr 1994 14:51:28 GMT -] From: jbenedict@law.fordham.edu (Jason Benedict) -] Subject: Bicycle with a rev -] -] The Bicycle that Darrin had mentioned is actually the "Hadzicki Shuffle". -] -] First done by the inventor of the kite and I beleive coined by those watching him. -] Interesting... I've never heard it called this and I live just up the coast from Hadzicki land. I would have no problems calling the bicycle the Hadzicki Shuffle in honor of what they have brought to kiting, but would this aid the endevor of standardizing names? I think we should decide *how to choose* the standard name, when there is more than one common/local name (or an very apt name like Hadzicki Shuffle). Comments from anyone on this? How do we decide? Or do we decide on a case by case basis? Darrin = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = Date: Tue, 12 Apr 1994 01:45:04 -1000 From: jeffy@syrinx.umd.edu (Jeffrey C. Burka) Message-Id: <2oe1k0$e4e@umd5.umd.edu> Organization: University of Maryland, College Park Subject: Re: Bicycle with a rev (Nomeclature) In article <9404112025.AA06237@stuntkite.ebay.sun.com> Darrin.Skinner@ebay.sun.com (Darrin Skinner) writes: > >-] Date: Mon, 11 Apr 1994 14:51:28 GMT >-] From: jbenedict@law.fordham.edu (Jason Benedict) >-] Subject: Bicycle with a rev >-] >-] The Bicycle that Darrin had mentioned is actually the "Hadzicki Shuffle". >-] First done by the inventor of the kite and I beleive coined by those >-]watching him. >-] > >Interesting... I've never heard it called this and I live just >up the coast from Hadzicki land. I would have no problems calling >the bicycle the Hadzicki Shuffle in honor of what they have brought >to kiting, but would this aid the endevor of standardizing names? I assume y'all are talking about the motion one's hands make when a Rev does a propellor spin without losing altitude? (I seem to have missed Darrin's first posting on this; my feed has been spotty recently). If so, that's what I've been referring to as the Hadzicki Shuffle for...what, a couple of years now? I don't even remember when I first heard it, or when. Is this another case of East Coast vs West Coast names? Jason's one of us easterners... >I think we should decide *how to choose* the standard name, when there >is more than one common/local name (or an very apt name like Hadzicki >Shuffle). I don't know how we'll ever decide for _any_ move, other than to do so purely arbitrarily. Unless we can find the originator for a specific trick and ask what _they_ call it (such as Steve Thomas and the axel), no name is 'more right' than another. 'Cept maybe the Hadzicki Shuffle. ;-) And I'll stand by "the Full Andrew" as well (and that's a move I've managed...) I still don't know how we'll come up with anything standardized for most Rev moves. I can't describe half the stuff I do in easy-to-digest soundbites! Jeff (who would like to propose that when you're flying a rev in zero wind and you pop the kite towards you at such a level that it just skims over your head so you can then turn around and fly at the oposite side of the sphere, you should refer to that as a guillotine...) -- |Jeffrey C. Burka | "Everything is still with a fear of never coming out | |Suffering Bad Grammar| Never following through / Never ever finishing | |jeffy@syrinx.umd.edu | What we wanted to do." -- Melissa Ferrick | = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =