How-To: Connect HUAWEI E220/E270/E272/E169G/E160/E180 Modem with Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard)

Sabtu, 17 Oktober 2009


I’ve been trying to get my USB Broadband Modem to work with Leopard for the past few days. Unfortunately the instructions that come with the modem from 3 (my network provider in australia) are out-of-date and don’t work.
So here are the steps to get the modem working:
1. Ignore the instructions that come with the modem (if you bought the modem from 3 in australia)
2. Download the drivers from here (updated link – drivers now hosted here) and install them onto your Mac. Make sure you install the second file in the zip. The first doesn’t work!
3. Plug the modem into your Mac’s USB port and wait until the modem stops flashing green.
4. Open up “Network Preferences” and click the “+” sign in the bottom left of the screen to add a new service:


5. Select the HUAWEI Mobile from the interface list and then give your Service a name:



6. Now setup your service by entering a telephone number of *99# but leave the Account Name and Password blank. Then click the Advanced button:



7. In the Advanced window select Generic as the vendor then GPRS (GSM/3G) as the model. Enter your APN for your provider (for 3 Postpaid in Australia it is 3netaccess – see below for a list of other known APN’s) and leave CID as 1.



8. Click Apply and then click the Connect button back on the Network Preferences window, and you should connect as below:



Another very handy tool is CheetahWatch which allows you to view your usage and is developed specifically for Mac and the HUAWEI modem.
Known APN’s (thanks everyone for posting these!):
Australia:
  • 3 Australia Mobile Broadband – 3internet
  • 3 Australia Prepaid Broadband – 3services
  • Vodaphone Australia – vfinternet.au
  • Optus - connect
UK:
  • O2 - m-bb.o2.co.uk (Account Name: 02bb Password: password)
  • UK 3 – three.co.uk
  • UK t-mobile – general.t-mobile.uk
  • Vodafone UK: APN: internet, userid/password: web, web on CHAP
  • Vodafone UK prepaid: APN: pp.internet, userid/password: web, web on CHAP
  • Vodafone UK pay-as-you go and topup: APN: pp.internet, userid/password: web, web on CHAP
Others:
  • Vodafone Italy – web.omnitel.it
  • AP for Guatemala Tigo - broadband.tigo.gt
  • AP for Honduras Tigo - broadband.tigo.hn
  • Morocco – internet1.meditel.ma
  • Hungarian Pannon ISP – net
  • Telia Sweden – online.telia.se
  • O2 in Czech Republic – Username: Internet, Password: Internet
  • Zain (Kuwait) – hspps
  • MTN (South Africa) – myMTM (or internet) – username: MTN, password: MTN
  • Vodafone Portugal – internet.vodafone.pt
If you find another APN that works (and isn’t listed) please post a comment.




Free Download MP3

Selasa, 13 Oktober 2009

Our choice of communication channels reflects our social webs

Senin, 14 September 2009



However much companies like MySpace, Friendster and Twitter think it's about them, it's not. It's about us, using their products to develop channels of communication.

The more these guys let us mix and match these channels, the more likely they'll still be around when the music stops.
Take a small recent event: Facebook's launch of an update for their application which runs on the BlackBerry.
Importantly, they dropped the button that lets you digitally poke people - my, did that idea get old quickly.
But they also did something clever. Now, users found that their Facebook messages also appeared in their email program.
This wasn't that unusual, since instant messages on services like Google Talk also appeared there.
But this Facebook thing was a bit of a first. And a bit of a historic moment, I suspect, in the evolution of all this web stuff.
First a bit of history. We all started out with email. That was how we communicated online.
We had work email. And home email.
Then instant messaging.
Then SMS or texting came along.
Then Facebook, Friendster, LinkedIn, orkut, twitter, Skype etc etc etc.
Now we have dozens of what we could call channels that we use to communicate with our friends, colleagues, relatives and enemies.
In the classes I teach, some students have about a dozen different windows open at the same time. And they have a couple of phones on the go too.
It looks messy, but actually it makes perfect sense to these people.
Email is obviously where most of us over the age of 25 do most of our communicating online.
Facebook is where a lot of people under the age do it.
Both are sorts of "clearing houses" for all our communicating.
People over the age of 25 use Facebook for communicating with intimate friends in a different way.
Or different people in an intimate way.
I've noticed Facebook users - at least in my sector - share information that is the sort of things they'd share in postcards, or at cocktail parties, or in once-a-year letters.
Facebook for them is less a clearing house than a posting house.
But then there's all the other channels.
Instant messaging is for stuff that can't wait - either because it's important or it's too inane to waste an email on.
Texting is usually for geographically specific stuff - just landed, home in an hour. Buy broccoli.
SMS cuts through all the clutter.
But the point is this: We have quickly adapted these channels to our needs, and those needs may vary, but for us they're specific, and they each have their own purpose.
There are some people I'd never SMS. And some people I'd message on Facebook that I'd never email. Some people I'd Skype but I'd never actually call.
Sounds bizarre, maybe, but it's just a reflection of the complex social webs we weave.
Which brings me back to Facebook on a Blackberry.
It might seem daft to have so many different channels, if actually they all are controlled from our email.
But the origin of each message is clearly marked. Our channels align but don't merge.
In other words, we keep all the channels we want, to reflect the complexity of our world and the kind of communications we have in it.
But if any company is going to be successful in the long term in this world, they'll have to allow those channels to be merged.
We want to keep our separate channels, but we don't want to have fiddle with them. For example, I may prefer to communicate with some people via Facebook - casual updates, a birthday wish, a picture that makes me realize they've just had twins - but not establish a long email exchange.
Twitter is an obvious reflection of this.
Some report suggested that people are signing up for it, but not twittering themselves.
So Twitter isn't a success?
No. It is. It's just a different form of communication.
Just like I might hold forth at a party and have everyone rapt by my tale-telling - it has happened, really - so do people follow the interesting, the outgoing, the prolific, on Twitter.
That they're passive in that doesn't matter. They're there.
It's another channel.
Twitter is a news channel for some people, an update channel for others, a lifeline for others, a distraction for others. The more channels we have, the more we'll find ways of using them.
The companies that get this and make it easy for us to use them in the myriad ways we haven't even dreamed of yet, will still be around to pick up the big bucks that, one day, will start to fall.
(c) 2009 Loose Wire Pte Ltd

AMD Gets Clevo Distribution Deal, Expanding To Emerging Markets

Intel may still have the lion's share of the market in the microprocessor realm, but AMD isn't doing too bad for itself these days either with all things considered. Aside from introducing a litany of new technologies and devices over the past week, the company also took time to beef up its distribution strategy, which is something that could signal a broader push into more markets.

For far too long, it has felt as if AMD was content with second place. With releases like this, however, it's clear that the company is no longer satisfied with being associated with that notion. This past week, AMD nailed down an agreement with Clevo to distribute notebooks with its own chipsets to emerging mobile markets, and considering that AMD generally has the price advantage over Intel, it seems as if emerging markets are a great place for the company to grab hold of a nice chunk of market share before Intel swoops in. The details of this particular agreement are below, but again, it's the concept here that has us interested. We'd love to see AMD be more proactive about reaching out to markets--the world could definitely use more competition!




  • AMD (NYSE:AMD) today announced that Clevo, a global notebook manufacturer based in Taiwan, is now providing notebooks powered by AMD platform technology. Combining ATI Mobility Radeon™ HD 4570 graphics, the AMD Athlon™ 64 X2 processor and the AMD M690G chipset, these new entry-level notebooks deliver advanced performance and mobility benefits.
  • The new Clevo notebooks deliver the multi-tasking performance and graphics power people need when enjoying 3D applications like maps, movies, online videos, digital photos, video games, music and TV programs at home or on the go.
  • Continuing its long-standing technology partnership with Clevo, AMD focused on providing a highly differentiated solution that maps back to the top computing priorities. These include superior graphics and video capabilities and larger screen options than what is typically offered in similarly-priced netbook solutions for emerging mobile markets such as Brazil or Taiwan.



How to Drive Tactically (Technical Driving)

Senin, 07 September 2009

The average driver should never need to think about tactical driving, but there is the rare occasion that it will become a necessity. More so, those in law enforcement may find tactical driving a life saving skill, or an ability which will help catch the ‘bad guy’. This tutorial covers some of the basics of skills and maneuvers which tend to be considered tactical driving, but may even be useful during an extreme situation such as avoiding an accident.

While reading this article may give you the knowledge about driving a car in certain situations, actually performing the skills will prove to be very different than just reading about them. The maneuvers should be practiced and perfected before attempting to do them in a situation which requires flawless execution under stressed conditions. Some of the things mentioned in the tutorial may be illegal on public streets and should never be practiced or performed there unless it is absolutely necessary.

Steps
Get Started

1. Depending on the car you have, some of these procedures may need a bit of alteration to work with your specific vehicle. When in doubt, get a better vehicle.
* Front-wheel-drive (FWD) vehicles are likely the most restricted. In general, FWDs tend to under-steer (washout) while in a corner when the driver is giving the vehicle gas to accelerate the car out of a turn. This is a bad thing, and greatly restricts the turning capabilities of the vehicle.
* Rear-wheel-drive (RWD) cars are more efficient than FWD for cornering and acceleration, but can become a hazard with an inexperienced driver. Donuts can be fun, but not during a critical situation.
* All-wheel-drive (AWD) cars have a good balance, but can also under-steer badly if it is not a vehicle with an active or manual center differential (most AWD vehicles have this feature, otherwise they are refered to as part-time 4wd).
* Knowing the characteristic of your vehicle is key to performing in extreme situations without putting yourself and others around you in danger. Please read the How to Choose a Car for Tactical Driving article for more information.
2. Stay alert:
* Whenever you are driving, you should always be aware of your surroundings. You should know what cars are around you at all times.
* If you are traveling fast, and cars in front of your are slamming on their brakes, you should first attempt to slow down, but you should also be scanning the area for an exit. There isn’t always an exit, but many times there is.
o Sometimes the "exit" is not a clean exit, and may be a what-will-cause-the-least-damage (CTLD) exit. This may consist of choosing to going off the road completely instead of just onto a shoulder. Choose the safest route before you choose the cheapest route.
* Many people become observably more alert after they have recently been in an accident, don’t let that be you. You should be alert to avoid your first accident as well as others around you who may not be paying attention.


Braking

Braking is a lost skill. With so many cars with anti-lock brakes (ABS), people just slam on the brakes in any situation. This can be a good option, but it is not always the best. Braking (even with ABS) can cause reduced handling capabilities and actually place you in more danger. Turning while on the brakes can cause the vehicle to neither turn as well as it could without the brakes or cause the vehicle to slowdown less than it could have without turning (read some of the maneuvers for further explanation).

1. Race car drivers, who are always on the edge with their vehicles, have learned the needed skill of separating braking from turning. In 90% of corners, racers (of any race type) use their brakes before they get to the corner, make the corner, then use the gas. Each section of the corner (or the straights before and after the corner) has its own purpose and separation of brakes and turning gives the best traction for the vehicle to make a desired corner.
2. Using your brakes (if you do not have ABS) should be done smoothly. Depress your brake pedal, do not slam it to the ground. This is a method called squeezing your brakes, and is essential to get the best braking potential from your vehicle. You bring your vehicle's tires just to the point of breaking traction. While some people say pumping your brakes is a good way to stop, especially on low traction surfaces, it is only a reliable way to stop if you are an inexperienced driver.
* This can be easily practiced in an empty parking lot. Roll down your windows and start at one end of the lot. Accelerate to a safe speed (30-40MPH should be good) and slam your brakes as hard and you can. You should hear a good deal of squealing (if you do not, you may have ABS, you may not have disc brakes, or your brakes may need replacing). Now go back the other direction and this time quickly depresses your brakes until you get the squealing again. Go back and forth until you are able to apply your brakes while only hearing a whisper of squealing (this is called the optimal squeeze point – OSP).
* What is the whisper of squealing I speak of? This is the point where your tire's rubber is being twisted and contorted to a point that only parts of your tires are actually skidding; this is the absolute limit of your tire's traction, and the quickest way to stop.
* You can measure this by setting up markers as to when to start braking and when you stop the car, and you can visually see the difference between your tires locked up and not.
* Extra practice: Purposely lock up your brakes. Now practice reducing pressure on the pedal until it stops locking up, then apply pressure to the OSP again).
* Take note: each surface and speed will have different OSPs. This is why you should practice while is dry, then while it is raining, and then when it is snowy (if available). Get yourself adequately adapted to different traction levels so nothing will surprise you.
3. Using your brakes (if you have ABS) is much simpler. In almost all cases, just depressing your brake pedal smoothly (albeit quickly) to the floor is often best. You will likely feel the pedal either vibrate (dependent ABS) or feel like it gives out altogether (independent ABS). Either way it is a sign of the ABS working. Of course, if the pedal feels like it gave out, and you aren't stopping, your brakes probably gave out, in which case you should just kiss it goodbye (or read the wikiHow article, How to Stop a Car with No Brakes).
4. For more information on braking, read How to Brake and Stop a Car in the Shortest Distance.


Swerving

We start with a very simple maneuver, but a very viable skill for normal drivers and technical drivers. This skill can save your life when you need to make a sudden direction adjustment with your car.

1. The scenario: Driving down the freeway, at night, it is raining so there is reduced traction and visibility on the road. You are traveling at 70MPH and about 100-feet in front of you a large box is in the middle of the road.
* This gives you almost exactly one second to decide what the best choice of action is, and execute it.
* Being a large box, you deduce there may be something very heavy in the box, and it can damage your car severely and put you and your passengers in danger.
2. Solution 1 (no cars around you): You should already know if there are cars near you (read "Stay alert" above). Do not touch your brakes! With only one second to react braking will only reduce the amount of traction available to your front tires, and may knock your vehicle out of balance, and thus, out of control, during the quick maneuver.
* Jerking the wheel toward the desired direction is not the safest way to swerve either (for all the same reasons as braking is unsafe). A controlled swerve is always best. If you out-steer your suspension, your car will only under-steer, possibly causing you to hit the box. You should steer swiftly without being jerky. Once out of the path of the box, roll the wheel the other way to straighten your vehicle out. Again, if you do it too fast you will spin out! Using your brakes before you straighten can also cause you to spin out. Once you are out of the way of the box, you have more time to correct your car's direction, so do not be hasty, and do not overcorrect.
* In this situation, no braking is involved, and the first turn away from the box should be done faster than the correction back in to the correct direction.
3. Solution 2 (cars are around you): This situation is much more tricky. If you are unable to move to the lane next to you, you should determine if there is a shoulder you can use. If there is no clean exit, the CTLD exit is likely hitting the box. Use the braking techniques from above and slow down as quickly as possible. A 70MPH car is not likely to be able to stop in 100-feet, but any reduction in speed will reduce the damage done to you, your passengers, and your car.
* In a non-critical (non-tactical) situation: If the box ends up being empty, and no damage is taken, be aware of cars behind you which may rear-end you because you are going slow, or are stopped in the middle of a freeway. Find a safe way to remove the box from the freeway, and continue. If the box does damage your car, be sure you and your passengers are alright. If you are able to safely get the car to the side of the road, do so. Keep it off the road, and stay in the car, the freeway is a dangerous place to be. Call (hopefully you have a cell phone) the police, and report the accident.
* In a critical (tactical) situation: if your car still functions properly after hitting the box (if you are trying to get somewhere) continue your journey. If your car does not function properly, hopefully you are not being chased and your life is not threatened by this problem.
4. If the object were a bit further away, the best decision would probably be to use your brakes for a short period of time, release them most of the way (all the way, and the transfer of weight off your front tires may cause your vehicle to become unstable when you try to swerve, or just under-steer), then swerve. The lower your speed is during the swerve, the safer the swerve will be executed.
5. To learn more about How to Do an S-Swerve in a Car safely.


Reverse 180 (J-Turn)

It is usually initiated from a stopped position, and can get you turned around even in a tight location (without an 8-point turn).

1. For this maneuver to be executed properly, you need enough room to have the car sideways, and then some. It is best practiced in an empty parking lot or dirt area (dirt will give you the same skills, but requires less speed, and will cause less tire wear).
2. Drive to one end of the area with your backend pointed in the direction you wish to go. Accelerate in reverse to 10-30MPH.
* In a FWD car, this next step is easy. Turn the wheel in one direction to initiate the front end sliding. Giving a bit more gas as soon as you start the turn will help a bit. As soon as the front of the vehicle starts sliding, press the brakes lightly, put the car in neutral, and be ready to put it into gear.
* In a RWD car, turn the wheel in one direction to initiate the front end sliding, but at the exact same time, press the brake pedal pretty hard, do not lock up your brakes, but this helps your vehicle pivot on the rear tires. Put the car in neutral, and be ready to put it into gear.
3. As soon as the slide is half-way through, put the car in gear (drive) and be prepared to step on the gas. As soon as you are pointed in the direction you desire to go, hit the accelerator and make any minor adjustments to your driving angle with your steering wheel.
4. You should practice spinning in both directions. And experiment with different amounts of gas and brakes at the outset of the slide.
5. If you do not put the car in neutral soon enough, or put in the car in gear (drive) too soon, you have the possibility of messing up your transmission.

Make a Tight Turn, Quickly

The tighter the turn you make, the slower it must be, but if you play your cards right, and make the turn faster than the other guy, then it might give you the edge you need.

1. We'll say (for practice sake) you are going to make a tight left-hand turn around a parking lot light post (one of those tall ones with the concrete base).
2. When you are practicing, you should lay down cones on either side of the car to represent a street.
3. Approaching the turn you should get as far to the right as possible. Use your brakes as late as possible (read the braking instructions above), keep as straight as possible, because turning will make your vehicle slow down...slower.
4. For a 90-degree turn (or less), it is a simple matter of making the turn by going from the right, getting as close to the concrete without hitting it, then exit the turn as far to the right as possible. This gives you the straightest line possible; naturally, it is also the fastest line.
5. For a 90-135-degree turn, you may need a little cooperation from your vehicle. Again, approach from the right, but this time use the hand-brake (if available) to bring the back of your car around. Do not use it for too long, else you will spinout. If a hand-brake is not available (i.e.: your vehicle has a foot-base e-brake), then you will have to just take the corner a little slower, so follow the 90-degree turn instructions.
6. For more than a 135-degree turn, an e-brake turn is necessary. Do not slow down as much as you would have normally for the turn, instead, drive a few feet past the turn (5 or more feet). While still going at a decent speed and going straight, pull the e-brake. Once the rear tires have locked up, turn the wheel to the left. The car's back end will spin around and point you almost in 180-degrees of your original course. Release the e-brake and drive off.
7. Any of these maneuvers done with a RWD or AWD vehicle should not be with any drifting style (with your back-end sliding as you accelerate). Keeping your back-end "tidy" is always the fastest way around the corner. If your tires are slipping under power to the point that the back-end swings out, you are giving it too much gas, and letting off the gas would actually accelerate you, or get you through the turn, faster.


The Pursuit Intervention Technique (PIT maneuver)

The PIT maneuver is a procedure which has been used by law enforcement departments around the world (this is also known by some as the Precision Immobilization Technique). Vehicles at high speed are, by laws in physics and aerodynamics, inherently less stable than at lower speeds. The rear of the vehicle is also fundamentally less stable than the front of the vehicle (especially a RWD vehicle, under acceleration).

1. Before the PIT maneuver is performed, it is assumed that Car A is approaching Car B from behind. The faster the speed (freeway speeds), the greater the advantage Car A has.
2. Car A attempts to put the front quarter of the car next to the rear quarter of Car B. It is usually performed while the two cars are almost touching each other. A starting distance which is too great can cause danger to Car A.
3. At speeds greater than 70MPH, Car B requires not much more than a good strong kiss from Car A. At speeds closer to 40MPH, Car A may need to sacrifice a bit of the front-end of the car to give a strong slam to the rear of Car B.
4. If Car A gives the initial tap with enough force, Car B's back-end should slide out. Car A will need to straighten out, as to not follow through too much and lose control. Car A then needs to slow down immediately to avoid broadsiding Car B. For two comparable cars, Car A should always be able to slow down faster than Car B.
5. Be prepared for Car B to try to drive off as soon as they have slowed enough to regain control. An experienced driver in a FWD vehicle could recover and drive off in the original direction at surprisingly fast speeds. An experienced driver in a RWD vehicle will, once the vehicle is slowed most of the way, likely try to accelerate in the opposite direction of the initial pursuit. AWD vehicles may be able to go either direction.
* This is a very difficult and dangerous maneuver, and should only be performed if you have been trained in the technique.
* Find out more about this maneuver by reading How to Use the Pursuit Intervention Technique (PIT Maneuver) in a Car.


[edit] Tips

* Practice, practice, practice in a safe location. Keeping you, your car, and others in the area safe is worth more than all the skills you think you have.
* Experimentation is the mother of technical driving. If you practice enough while trying different things, you will find something that is better, faster, or safer than what is listed here.
* Look where you turn. You always want to watch where you are going, not where you are pointed. Your steering naturally follows your sight. It also allows you to better view upcoming obstacles.
* Autocross (or even rallycross) is a fun way to practice driving talent in a competitive sport. It can improve your tactical driving in many areas, but primarily in experience.


ADDITION:

This is a really good article.

If you are going too fast, and there is a car stopped at a redlight or a stopsign infront of you, avoid a collision by aiming to stop next to the car to the right instead of behind it. This way if you skid or dont have enough space to stop, you wont rear end the car infront of you.

Also on highway driving, 70mph in the rain is extremely unsafe. Even with 4wd and rain tires, you will probably hydroplane into a truck or a tree. The box 100 ft ahead of you is going to get hit, it is already too late. If it is not in the center of the lane you might be able to avoid it.

RWD cars are safe if the driver knows how to control the car. Brake steer then gas is most important in RWD. Brake and steer at the same time would most likely end up with you facing the wrong direction on a 65mph highway...ouch.

FWD cars are the best in the rain, and AWD is best in the snow. RWD is best on dry summer days.


Warnings

* Any practicing you do should not be done on public streets! Your own private property is the best.
* Always drive safely. Be observant of pedestrians and other vehicles.
* Driving (especially tactical or technical driving) can be very dangerous, and it should only be done in emergency situations, when no other choice is available.
* Never break the law! Obey speed limits, research state and local laws, and be sure to obey all the laws.
* While practice is crucial, it should be noted that many of the maneuvers can cause damage to vehicles. Alignment, engine mounts, bearings and many other parts can suffer wear or malfunctions. Some people use a cheap "practice car" to practice with.

Molina's pinch-hit 3-run HR helps the Giants to a comeback victory

Kamis, 27 Agustus 2009


just graffiti - Sport News

It might have been the slowest home run trot in major league history, but Bengie Molina meant no disrespect.
He simply couldn't go any faster.
Molina certainly quickened hearts on a chilly night at China Basin. Out of the lineup again because of a sore right quadriceps, he came off the bench and delivered a three-run home run in the eighth inning, sending the Giants to a sudden and significant 4-3 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks on Wednesday night.
Molina drilled an 0-2 slider from Chad Qualls high into the foggy air, and after a seemingly interminable wait, it settled into the first row of the left field bleachers.
A smallish crowd of 27,645 erupted and wouldn't stop chants of "Ben-gee" until Molina acknowledged them with a curtain call.
Worn down by a heavy workload over the weekend at Coors Field and miscast for two seasons in the cleanup spot, Molina's swing might have been his biggest in three years as a Giant.
"It's been a battle for me," said Molina, who wasn't sure if he'd be in the lineup today. "I've played more than usual. I haven't gotten many days off to refresh myself. But I feel good.
"I have a feeling I'll finish strong."
And what about those chants from the stands?
"Unbelievable," Molina said. "I haven't gotten that feeling the whole year. The fans, believe it or not, are a big part of this. I hope they understand that. They can pump you up big-time."
Or they can voice disapproval.


Advertisement

They exercised that right when Justin Miller relieved Jonathan Sanchez to begin the eighth inning."Oh yeah, I can hear it," said Miller, who fueled Monday's crushing defeat at Coors Field in which he walked Rockies pitcher Adam Eaton with the bases loaded.
"I understand where they're coming from, but I'm ready to help this team. What's in the past is in the past."
Miller moved forward with a scoreless eighth to receive the victory. It was the wonder drug he needed after he failed to retire any of the last nine hitters he faced in Colorado.
"I woke up in my bed (Tuesday) saying, 'What the hell happened?'"‰" Miller said. "I felt like I fell off a third-story building. It was physically and mentally exhausting.
"But I knew what I was capable of. Those two games, it wasn't me."
Sanchez allowed a leadoff home run to Ryan Roberts but gave the Giants exactly what their weary bullpen needed. He pitched seven innings and his only two walks — one intentional — came during the Diamondbacks' two-run rally in the sixth inning.
With closer Brian Wilson unavailable after throwing 70 pitches over the previous two nights, Brandon Medders retired the final three hitters — against his former team, no less — to record his first career save.
Medders wasn't supposed to be Wilson's understudy, but Sergio Romo couldn't get loose in time. That's how suddenly Molina's shot changed the game.
Soft-tossing left-hander Doug Davis, a Northgate High product, dominated a lineup that lacked Molina and Pablo Sandoval, who had a respiratory ailment in addition to a bruised right calf.
But Edgar Renteria quietly began the winning rally with a two-out, seven-pitch walk in the eighth, and Randy Winn followed with a soft single. Qualls relieved Davis, and Giants manager Bruce Bochy didn't hesitate to replace Ryan Garko with Molina, who was 3-for-5 against the Diamondbacks closer.
Qualls threw three consecutive sliders. The third one stayed in Molina's happy zone.
The Giants took their team photo Wednesday afternoon. Then they took the field knowing that a victory would improve their playoff picture one way or the other.
As it turned out, the Los Angeles Dodgers won at Colorado, allowing the Giants to move within three games of the Rockies in the wild-card race.

GIANTS 4,
D'BACKS 3


  • tODAY:
    Diamondbacks (Yusmeiro Petit 2-8) at Giants (Joe Martinez 3-1), 7:15 p.m.
    TV: CSNBA. Radio: 680-AM

    Nl wild-card race
    W L GB
    Rockies 72 55 --
    GIANTS 69 58 3
    Marlins 67 59 41 2
    Braves 66 60 51 2
    inside








  • Rohlinger gets chance to make better impression. Page 3





  • Baghdatis eliminated from Pilot Pen


    just graffiti - Sport News


    NEW HAVEN -- Marcos Baghdatis wanted to show his gratitude for receiving one of the four wild cards into the Pilot Pen Tennis tournament by contending for the men's singles title. Yet with the crowd behind him at the Stadium Court, it was apparent from the outset that Baghdatis didn't resemble the player that was once ranked eighth in the world.
    Struggling with Frederico Gil's serve throughout, Baghdatis was unceremoniously eliminated in the opening round of the Pilot Pen Tennis tournament with a 6-4, 6-3 loss. Gil, a native of Portugal who worked his way into the main draw through the qualifying round, will play 12th-seeded German Philipp Petzschner in the second round. Baghdatis, meanwhile, was left wondering what went wrong.
    "It was just one of those days where you get on the court and you can't find your way," said the 24-year-old from Cyprus. "It's really frustrating and I'm real sorry for the tournament. They gave me a wild card and I acted like an idiot."
    Baghdatis, who was ranked eighth on the ATP World Tour in August of 2006, has struggled to return to Top-10 form after sustaining a stress fracture in his right wrist and a back injury last year. Both players held serve through the first nine games, but Gil broke with Baghdatis serving at 4-5, to take the first set.
    Recognized as possessing a strong serve and forehand, Baghdatis was a victim of Gil's powerful baseline game in the second set. Painting the lines with winners and setting up Baghdatis


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    with his blistering first serve, Gil won the match in 1 hour, 22 minutes. "I'm so disappointed now, there's no excuse for today," said Baghdatis, who is currently ranked 109 in the world. "It's very frustrating that I wasn't able to come back or fight back in this match."
    Always a popular player, Baghdatis' best performance at a Grand Slam occurred when he advanced to the finals of the 2006 Australian Open where he lost to Roger Federer. He is remembered as being the last opponent that American Andre Agassi defeated in his career, a victory that came at the U.S. Open.
    There will be no trip to The National Tennis Center next week for Baghdatis. He opted to not to play in the U.S. Open several weeks ago, a decision he hopes will help him get his health back.
    "Right now, I'm going to go home, practice and work hard to come back," he said. "I have no pain right now, which is important. I'm just going to try my best to forget this match."
    It was a good day at the Connecticut Tennis Center for Americans Kevin Kim and Robert Kendrick. The unseeded Kim, who is ranked No. 100 on the ATP World Tour, registered a 6-4, 5-7, 6-3 win against Russian Teimuraz Gabashvili in first round action at the Grandstand.
    Kim, whose highest ranking was when he reached No. 63 in 2005, has a stern challenge ahead of him in the second round. He will face seventh-seeded Igor Andreev of Russia, who is currently the world's 30th ranked player.
    Unseeded Kendrick, meanwhile, upended qualifier Frederik Nielsen of Denmark, 6-2, 2-6, 7-6 (5) in the second match of the day at the Stadium court. The 29-year-old from Fresno, Calif., has the unenviable task of playing top-seeded Russian Nikolay Davydenko in the second round. Ranked No. 8 in the ATP World Tour, Davydenko has garnered 16 singles titles.
    Italian Potito Starace needed three sets to get past German Misha Zverev (6-3, 2-6, 6-3), as did German Bjorn Phau against fellow countryman Benjamin Becker, 2-6, 6-2, 6-3. Also winning their first round matches were Italian Simone Bolelli, who vanquished Christophe Bochus of Belgium 6-3, 6-4, Pablo Cuevas of Uruguay, who downed Andrey Golubev from Russia, 6-3, 6-4 and Spain's Guillermo Garcia-Lopez, a 6-2, 6-2 winner against Yen-Hsun Lu (Chinese Taipei).