Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Captain Paul Azinger changes Ryder Cup format back to alternate shot at Valhalla

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) -- Ryder Cup captain Paul Azinger is switching the format with hopes of giving his American team an edge, going back to alternate shot in the opening matches for the first time since 1999.

"I felt like the Americans had an edge in alternate shot," Azinger said Wednesday at the FBR Open. "And I think it's partly responsible for why Europe has gotten off to a pretty hot start."

The Ryder Cup will be played Sept. 19-21 at Valhalla, and the home captain gets to decide the order.

Alternate shot, or foursomes, had been used in the first sessions every year since 1981 until European captain Seve Ballesteros opened with better ball (fourballs) in 1997 at Valderrama. U.S. captain Ben Crenshaw switched back to alternate shot in 1999 at Brookline, but the last three Ryder Cup matches have started with better ball.

Europe has won the last three Ryder Cup matches, and five of the last six. The Americans have not led after the first of five sessions since 1991 at Kiawah Island.

Azinger said he also would work with the Valhalla superintendent on setting up the golf course. He credited Europe in recent years, particularly at The Belfry in 2002, for setting up the course that made fairways extremely narrow beyond 290 yards, which negated some of the power of Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson and other big hitters.

He said the PGA of America has given him freedom to set the course up however it fits his team.

"Maybe if everybody hits it as straight as Jim Furyk ... I don't know if I can narrow the fairways, but I can sure have the rough deep," Azinger said. "But if I have a bunch of Bubba Watsons, J.B. Holmes, Pat Perez, Phil Mickelson, guys that crank it and bomb it, maybe there won't be rough. I don't know yet. We'll see."

Azinger already has made one drastic change to the selection process, taking only the top eight players and basing the points entirely on money, with most of the points earned in 2008. Only money earned at the majors counted in 2007.

Woods hopes to extend winning streak at Dubai Desert Classic

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -- Tiger Woods isn't slowly easing into the 2008 season. He's playing back-to-back tournaments -- and flying halfway around the world to do it.

After a commanding win in California, Woods is feeling fresh and hoping for a fifth straight title in sunny, skyscraper-studded Dubai.

"It's one of those things where I've always played pretty well coming off breaks, and you feel fresh and my practice sessions were pretty good," Woods said at palm tree-lined Emirates Golf Club, where the $2.5 million Dubai Desert Classic gets under way Thursday.

"Coming over here after playing well last week, (I'm) really looking forward to teeing it up this week and giving it a go."

Woods' dominant eight-stroke win Sunday at the Buick Invitational was his fourth straight and 62nd career title, tying Arnold Palmer for fourth on the PGA Tour list. If he triumphs in Dubai, it will be his seventh win in eight starts, including a victory in his own tournament, the Target World Challenge in December.

After working on his swing for months and taking a 10-week break following the Tour Championship and another five weeks off after the Target World Challenge, Woods has high hopes for this season. Earlier this month, he declared that winning the Grand Slam in a calendar year is "easily within reason."

On Wednesday, Woods again said if he controls his own play and peaks at the right times this year, the four majors are in reach.

"It's about playing well at the right times," he said. "It's about getting lucky, actually. You have to have everything go your way."

But Woods also attributed his winning streak to years of tinkering with his game.

"One of the reasons why I made the changes that I made is to get to this point," he said. "And the great thing is, we have a long way to go."

Unlike the Buick Invitational, which Woods has won four years in a row, the Dubai Desert Classic has not always gone his way.

He is 1-for-4 here -- and his win in 2006 didn't come easily. Woods had to go birdie-birdie over the final two holes to get into a playoff with three-time champion Ernie Els, whom he defeated on the first extra hole.

Last year, poor putting troubled Woods, who finished third behind the South African and winner Henrik Stenson.

Along with Els and Stenson, Woods will face some of the European Tour's other top players, including money leader Lee Westwood, Sergio Garcia and Colin Montgomerie, another former Dubai Desert Classic winner (1996) who will go head-to-head with Woods in the first two rounds.

Stenson, who is coming off of two second-place European Tour finishes in Qatar and Abu Dhabi, said it's possible to beat Woods -- by focusing on a good score, not the world's top player.

"You have to believe it," Stenson said. "I've done it once, so I've sort of proven it myself that I've won a tournament where he played at least."

The Emirates Golf Club is a lush green oasis in the middle of Dubai, a booming desert city in the oil-rich United Arab Emirates. The club is surrounded by gleaming skyscrapers, towering construction cranes and traffic-clogged highways -- but its jewel is the 7,211-yard, par-72 Majlis Course.

The weather is almost always warm and sunny on the tip of the Arabian peninsula, and Wednesday was no different.

Woods said the greens were a bit slower than in the past due to recent spate of rain, and the rough was up a touch.

"But all in all, the golf course is ... in perfect shape, and it is year-in and year-out," he said.

Playing golf won't be the only thing on Woods' agenda in Dubai. In late 2006, Woods announced he was designing his first golf course here.

Called Al Ruwaya, which means serenity in Arabic, the course will be built in Dubailand, the region's largest tourism and leisure project, and will feature a 7,700-yard, par-72 course, golf academy, 320 villas and an 80-suite boutique hotel. It is expected to be completed next year.

Woods plans to visit the site during his stay. So far, the first two holes have been shaped.

"It's been eye-opening, the detail that goes into it. I didn't really realize that, but I've also loved it, too," Woods said. "I absolutely spend hours ... just looking at plans and thinking and creating."

Dubai and the United Arab Emirates are trying to establish themselves as a premier location for sports like golf and tennis, and other players have announced plans for courses in this city. Els launched his $18 million, 7,538-yard links-style course in Dubai Sports City on Monday. It will open to the public in March.

Dubai also plans to host the world's richest golf tournament beginning next year with a prize fund of $10 million. The European Tour's Dubai World Championship, to be held at another luxury club -- the Jumeirah Golf Estates -- also will include an annual $10 million bonus pool.

Super Bowl is no distraction at raucous FBR Open

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) -- For a change, the FBR Open isn't the biggest show in town, not with the Super Bowl just down the freeway.

Still, it's "party on" when the PGA Tour's most raucous event begins a four-day run Thursday at TPC Scottsdale.

The FBR draws the largest crowds on the PGA tour. The biggest day is Saturday, when more than 150,000 revelers are expected to attend. Some even watch the golf. Total attendance has topped a half-million each of the past four years.

When the Super Bowl was held in nearby Tempe in 1996, the tournament moved up its schedule with the final round on Saturday. Not this year. The competition will end Sunday, about an hour before the Patriots and Giants kick off in Glendale.

As usual, Tiger Woods is not entered, opting instead for a more lucrative trip to Dubai. Woods hasn't played here since 2001, when it was known as the Phoenix Open.

The biggest name in the competition for a winner's purse of just over $1 million is two-time champion Phil Mickelson, who beat Justin Leonard in a playoff to win that 1996 event.

Mickelson, who attended Arizona State and lived in Scottsdale for 12 years, also won in 2005 but missed the cut last year.

"I putted just terribly," he said. "The next three or four days after this event all I did was putt. Then I won the following week (the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am)."

Attempts are being made to calm the Arizona crowd a bit.

Fans will be limited to two beers per trip to the concession stand and beer won't be sold in the stand closest to the infamous 16th hole.

Bleachers surround that par-3, 162-yard hole, packed with rowdy fans who sometimes greet golfers with their college fight song or, for the international players, maybe their national anthem but lustily boo bad shots.

"It's special to this tournament. It's special to this town," defending champion Aaron Baddeley said. "People around here who don't know anything about golf know the 16th hole in Phoenix.

"It's like the shortest, easiest most intimidating hole in the world because it's not a difficult hole, but when you've got 17,000 people ready to boo you if you hit a bad shot, it's a little bit intimidating."

The course was drenched by rain Monday but clear weather was forecast through most of the rest of the week. Temperatures only reached the high 50s during Wednesday's pro-am but are expected to climb into the mid-60s Friday and Saturday. There is a chance of showers on Sunday.

With it's wide-open desert layout, the par-71, 7,216-yard course lends itself to low scores.

"You're probably going to have to shoot 20 under to win," Baddeley said. "It's just go out there, play hard, hit it straight and make some putts. That's the key. It's making putts, really, because everyone is going to hit fairways, everyone is going to hit some greens."

Baddeley, an Australian who now makes his home in Scottsdale, won last year with a 21-under 263, one shot better than John Rollins and two ahead of Jeff Quinney.

There has been no repeat champion in the event since Johnny Miller in 1974-75.

Why?

"Like I said, you've got to putt well," Baddeley said. "Some weeks putts don't drop and some weeks they do."

Cameroon wins, Egypt draws to advance to quarterfinals at African Cup

KUMASI, Ghana (AP) -- Defending champion Egypt and four-time winner Cameroon both reached the African Cup of Nations quarterfinals on Wednesday, with Cameroon striker Samuel Eto'o setting a tournament record with his 16th career goal.

Eto'o scored twice, including a 27th-minute penalty, in the 3-0 win over Sudan in Tamale, giving him two goals more than Ivory Coast striker Laurent Pokou's previous mark. "There is always something to work on," Cameroon coach Otto Pfister said. "Of course I am happy. We are qualified. It wasn't very spectacular, but now we will prepare for our quarterfinal."

Cameroon will play the winner of Group D, while Egypt will meet the runner-up. Tunisia leads Angola on goal differential atop Group D, and the two face off Thursday in their final first-round games.

Mohamed Ali Khider scored an own-goal to give Cameroon a 2-0 halftime lead, and Eto'o added his second in injury time. Part of Cameroon's African Cup-winning side in 2000 and 2002, Eto'o leads all scorers with five goals through three games.

In Kumasi, Amr Zaki converted Sayed Moawad's left-footed cross to put Egypt in front in the 16th minute. But Christopher Katongo scored a late goal to earn Zambia a 1-1 draw.

"As a team we take this a failure," Zambia captain Katongo said. "As an individual, I don't think I failed. I have shown people what I can do."

Wednesday's win finished Cameroon with six points, one point behind Egypt in Group C.

Ivory Coast, Nigeria, Guinea and host Ghana all had perviously qualified for the last eight.

Cameroon will stay in the northern Ghana town of Tamale for its Monday quarterfinal. Egypt will play the Group D runner-up in Kumasi the same day.

Zambia, a losing finalist in 1974 and 1994, was eliminated and joined 1970 champion Sudan on the sideline.


Eddie Lewis needs knee operation; out for a month

DERBY, England (AP) -- U.S. midfielder Eddie Lewis needs a knee operation, ruling him out of next week's exhibition game against Mexico in Houston.

"He needs a small operation to remove some cartilage," Derby manager Paul Jewell said Tuesday. "That could keep him out for about a month."

The 33-year-old Lewis was injured during Saturday's FA Cup loss against Preston and will be unable to play during the club's first matches under the new American ownership of Detroit-based consortium General Sports and Entertainment.

The Rams have won just one of their 23 Premier League matches this season.

Ronaldo double puts Man Utd top

Cristiano Ronaldo increased his goal tally to 27 on the season as his double against Portsmouth saw Manchester United return to the top of the Premier League on Wednesday.

The 22-year-old claimed two goals in three minutes as United cruised to a 2-0 victory at Old Trafford.

Ronaldo put United ahead in the 10th minute when he beat the offside trap to collect Nani's pass and slipped the ball across David James.

The Portuguese added a spectacular second with an unstoppable free-kick over a static Portsmouth wall and into the net before James had even moved.

Chelsea equalled a club record of nine successive wins in all competitions, set in 2005 under Jose Mourinho, with a 1-0 success at home over Reading.

The victory means the Blues are now unbeaten in 75 consecutive league games at Stamford Bridge - and remain in third place.

Michael Ballack got the only goal of the game in the 33rd minute when he converted Paulo Ferreira's cross from the right with a towering header.

Everton and Tottenham shared a 0-0 draw at Goodison Park, with the hosts remaining in fourth place.

Andy Johnson came closest in the second half when he found himself unmarked in front of goal following a sharp turn - but his shot was saved by Radek Cerny.

Mark Noble scored an injury-time penalty to claim a 1-0 win for West Ham over Liverpool at Upton Park.

Noble kept his cool to convert the spot-kick, after Jamie Carragher brought down Freddie Ljungberg as the Hammers counter-attacked.

Liverpool remains without a league win since Boxing Day.

Derby shared a 1-1 draw with Manchester City at Pride Park, the visitors leapfrogging Liverpool into sixth place.

Derby took the lead immediately after half-time when Kenny Miller's shot, which was going wide, hit Sun Jihai and went into the net.

However, City replied through Daniel Sturridge in the 63rd minute - the teenager getting his second goal in two games when he converted from close range from Martin Petrov's left-wing cross.

Victory not enough for Atletico

Crisis club Valencia made it through to the semi-finals of the Copa del Rey despite suffering a 3-2 defeat at the hands of Atletico Madrid on Wednesday night.

Valencia has lurched from one problem to another this season but a cup semi-final - no matter that it came following yet another defeat - will give under-pressure coach Ronald Koeman some much-needed cheer.

Atletico, trailing 1-0 from the first leg, looked set for a comfortable night after scoring twice in the opening 18 minutes.

Diego Forlan created both goals, first firing in a cross from the right which was turned into his own net by Valencia full-back Miguel under pressure from Fabiano Eller, then putting Sergio Aguero clean through to make it 2-0.

Valencia stunned the home crowd though by netting two quickfire goals with virtually its only efforts of the first half.

Cleber Santana scored the second own goal of the match in the 28th minute when, in trying to challenge David Villa, he put the ball past wrong-footed Atletico goalkeeper Falcon.

Then seven minutes later a clever Ever Banega pass set Mata through on the left and he lashed a superb rising shot into the near top corner.

Atletico got a third when Valera headed home Aguero's corner, but that was not enough to deny Valencia a place in the last four.

Ten-man Getafe squeezed through on away goals after Esteban Granero scored late on in a 2-1 defeat to Real Mallorca.

The Azulones took a 1-0 lead into the game but were soon in trouble as Ariel Ibagaza scored from the penalty spot after only seven minutes.

Juan Arango doubled Mallorca's lead in the 55th minute but Granero snatched a last-gasp away goal to send Getafe through to the last four.

The hero then turned villain in the 88th minute when he was sent off, but the dismissal did little to mar the visitors' celebrations.

PSV pulls clear in Eredivisie

PSV Eindhoven took a significant step towards defending its Eredivisie crown on Wednesday night with a 2-0 victory over closest challenger Ajax in Amsterdam.

The win, coupled with a 2-2 draw between title rivals Feyenoord and AZ Alkmaar, means PSV is now eight points clear at the summit.

Sef Vergoossen's men went ahead through Balazs Dzsudzsak four minutes before half-time and made sure of the points when Otman Bakkal netted with 17 minutes to go.

A miserable night for Ajax was compounded in the final minute when former Holland international Edgar Davids was sent off.

Feyenoord twice came from behind to earn a share of the points with AZ, with Giovanni Van Bronckhorst and Luiz Andre Bahia cancelling out goals from Graziano Pelle and Mounir El Hamdaoui.

Catania advances in Coppa Italia

Catania will make its first ever appearance in the Coppa Italian semifinals after a late goal Takayuki Morimoto gave the Sicilians a 2-1 win over Udinese on Wednesday.

The Japanese striker scored in the 89th minute to send Catania through on away goals after the first leg ended 3-2 in Udinese's favour.

The visitors got off to the perfect start when Simone Pepe put them in front in the first minute.

But Gionatha Spinesi levelled for Catania from the penalty spot a minute before half-time before Morimoto won it late on.

Silvio Baldini's men will now play Roma in the last four, the Giallorossi having beaten Sampdoria on Tuesday night.

Serie A leader Inter Milan booked its place in the semifinals with a 3-2 win over rival Juventus in Turin.

It was all to play for at the Stadio Olimpico after the first leg finished 2-2.

And it was Inter who seized the early initiative when 17-year-old striker Mario Balotelli put the visitors ahead after 10 minutes.

Alessandro Del Piero equalized four minutes later with a free-kick and Vincenzo Iaquinta gave Juve a 2-1 lead shortly after the half-hour mark.

Julio Cruz restored parity from the penalty spot six minutes before the break before Balotelli grabbed what proved to be the winner after 52 minutes.

Juve finished with 10 men after Italy winger Mauro Camoranesi was sent off with five minutes to go for a crude tackle.

Inter will next meet Lazio, which completed a 4-2 aggregate win over Fiorentina with a 2-1 victory on Wednesday.

Franco Semioli put Fiorentina ahead after 16 minutes but the Biancoceleste stormed back to win with goals from Aleksandar Kolarov and Tommaso Rocchi.

Ronaldo leads Man United to 2-0 win over Portsmouth, first place in Premier League

LONDON (AP) -- Cristiano Ronaldo scored both goals to lead Manchester United over visiting Portsmouth 2-0 Wednesday night and back into first place in the English Premier League.

Ronaldo scored in the 10th and 13th minutes and leads the league with 17 goals, one more than Arsenal's Emmanuel Adebayor. Ronaldo has 27 goals in all competitions this season.

Manchester United (18-3-3) and Arsenal (17-1-6) each have 57 points, and Manchester United leads on goal difference.

Third-place Chelsea (16-3-5), which trails by four points, beat visiting Reading 1-0 on a 33rd-minute goal by Michael Ballack, who headed in Paulo Ferreira's cross. The Blues stretched their league-record home unbeaten streak to 75 games and won their ninth straight in all competitions, matching their club record.

Tottenham (7-10-7) drew 0-0 at fourth-place Everton (13-7-4); Manchester City drew 1-1 at last-place Derby, which got its first point at home since September; and seventh-place Liverpool (10-3-10) lost 1-0 at West Ham (10-7-6), which scored on a 90th-minute penalty kick by Mark Noble following Jamie Carragher's foul of Fredrik Ljungberg.

ROME (AP) -- Alberto Gilardino headed in a cross from Andrea Pirlo in the 18th minute, and AC Milan beat Reggina 1-0 in a rescheduled Serie A game.

Milan (8-5-6) moved into sixth place with 30 points, 20 behind league-leading Internazionale.

Inter advanced to the semifinals of the Italian Cup, beating Juventus 3-2 as 17-year-old Mario Balotelli scored twice. Inter won the home-and-home quarterfinal on 5-4 aggregate.

Inter's semifinal will be against Lazio, which defeated Fiorentina 2-1 on goals from Aleksander Kolarov and Tommaso Rocchi to advance on 4-2 aggregate.

In Sicily, Japanese forward Takayuki Morimoto scored in the 89th minute to lead Catania to a 2-1 win over Udinese, putting the Sicilian club in the final four for the first time. Catania advanced on away goals after losing the first leg 3-2 and next plays defending champion AS Roma.

MADRID, Spain (AP) -- Valencia and Getafe advanced to the Spanish King's Cup semifinals despite losses.

Atletico Madrid beat Valencia 3-2, but an own goal by Cleber Santana and a score by Juan Manuel Mata was enough for Valencia to advance following its 1-0 first leg win.

Getafe got an 82nd-minute goal from Esteban Granero and advanced despite a 2-1 loss to Mallorca.

FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) -- Mario Gomez scored in the 29th, 32nd and 43rd minutes to give Stuttgart a 3-2 win over Werder Bremen's reserves and take the Bundesliga champion into the quarterfinals of the German Cup.

Wolfsburg beat Schalke 5-3 on penalty kicks after a 1-1 tie in overtime, and Hamburg SV advanced to the quarterfinals for the first time in 11 years when it won 3-0 at third-division Rot-Weiss Essen on goals by Rafael van der Vaart, Piotr Trochowski and Ivica Olic.

GLASGOW, Scotland (AP) -- Rangers reached the final of the Scottish League Cup final, getting goals from Barry Ferguson and Jean-Claude Darcheville.

Celtic's Scottish Premier League match at Motherwell was postponed because of a waterlogged field.

AC Milan blanks Reggina

AC Milan's climb up the Serie A table continued on Wednesday night after Alberto Gilardino grabbed the only goal in a 1-0 victory over Reggina.

Reggina, who had taken four points from its previous two games, offered little in attack and never looked like stunting Milan's progress once Gilardino put the Rossoneri ahead after 18 minutes.

The Italy striker, who has fallen down the pecking order at the San Siro club in recent weeks following the return to fitness of Ronaldo and the emergence of Brazilian sensation Alexandre Pato, nodded home Andrea Pirlo's centre to settle a dour encounter.

With Ronaldo again in the treatment room, Gilardino was handed the chance to partner Pato in attack and seized his chance with both hands to set Milan up nicely for the weekend clash against Fiorentina.

With the Viola sitting in fourth, seven points ahead of Milan, it is a match Carlo Ancelotti's men must win if they are to qualify for next season's Champions League.

Reggina remain a point above the relegation zone but they will have to show more attacking flair in their remaining games if they are to stay in the top flight.

The hosts were second-best throughout.

Milan started well and could have gone ahead inside a quarter of an hour when Gennaro Gattuso burst through a couple of challenges before firing in a shot which home keeper Andrea Campagnolo saved well.

Milan went ahead from their next attack, Pirlo crossing from the left for Gilardino to power a header into the net from close range.

Gilardino and Gattuso both came close again as the Rossoneri turned the screw.

It took Reggina 32 minutes to muster a shot on target, Fabio Ceravolo getting the better of Alessandro Nesta before seeing his shot blocked by Milan keeper Zeljko Kalac.

The second half continued in the same vein with Milan dominating possession.

Gattuso came close once more with a curling effort before Bruno Cirillo had to make a great last-ditch tackle to deny Gilardino just as he was about to shoot.

Pirlo is regarded as one of the best free-kick takers in the world and he twice came close to doubling Milan's lead.

His first effort was tipped round the post by Campagnolo and the second crashed off the bar with the keeper beaten.

Campagnolo distinguished himself again shortly afterwards with a brilliant save to keep out Emerson's far-post header.

Reggina never really threatened an equalizer although Francesco Cozza did trouble Kalac with a 20-yard drive.

Umps angry MLB is asking neighbors whether they are members of KKK

NEW YORK (AP) -- Umpires are livid that Major League Baseball has sent investigators to their hometowns, asking neighbors a series of questions that include whether the ump belongs to the Ku Klux Klan.

"The questions that we found out are being asked are about beating wives, marijuana use and extravagant parties," World Umpires Association president John Hirschbeck said in a telephone interview Wednesday. "And then finally with this whole thing about the Ku Klux Klan.

"You get someone from security, shows his credentials and starts asking these kind of questions, and right away what's the neighbor going to think other than the umpire is in trouble, he's done something wrong and he's going to lose his job."

Hirschbeck and union spokesman Lamell McMorris said Tom Christopher, the Milwaukee-based supervisor of security and investigations in the commissioner's office, had asked questions about Klan membership to neighbors of umpires Greg Gibson and Sam Holbrook, who reside in Kentucky. In addition, Hirschbeck said similar questions had been asked to neighbors of umpire Ron Kulpa, who lives in suburban St. Louis.

Baseball stepped up background checks last August, after it became public that the FBI was investigating NBA referee Tim Donaghy for betting on games. Donaghy pleaded guilty to felony charges of conspiracy to engage in wire fraud and transmitting betting information through interstate commerce, and he awaits sentencing.

MLB asked umpires to sign authorizations allowing the sport to conduct financial backgrounds checks, but umps balked.

"We did not anticipate that they would approach neighbors posing as a close colleague and friend of the umpire's and asking them questions such as: Do you know if umpire `X' is a member of the Ku Klux Klan? Does he grow marijuana plants? Does he beat his wife? Have you seen the police at his home? Does he throw wild parties?" McMorris said by telephone from India.

"To try to link our umpires to the Ku Klux Klan is highly offensive. It is essentially defaming the umpires in their communities by conducting a very strange and poorly executed investigation. It resembles kind of secret police in some kind of despotic nation."

Contacted Wednesday, Christopher referred questions to Rob Manfred, baseball's executive vice president for labor relations. Manfred did not immediately return a telephone call seeking comment.

"The claims of inappropriate questions by individuals conducting background checks was brought to our attention and looked into," Jimmie Lee Solomon, MLB's executive vice president of operations, said in a statement. "It was determined that these claims were inaccurate. Questioning was conducted with a written script consistent with common practice, and there was no inappropriate conduct on behalf of the investigators."

Alison Rohan, who lives across the street from Kulpa in Maryland Heights, Mo., said Christopher knocked on her door two or three weeks ago and gave her his card.

"He explained they were going to be talking to neighbors and friends because of the problems with the basketball league and that Ron knew about it," she said. "He listed about 10 different questions, the first one being did Ron live out of his means? For example, does he drive a Rolls-Royce?"

Rohan said she told Christopher that Kulpa lived in a manner similar to that of his neighbors.

"He asked if Ron belonged to any groups or organizations," she said.

"Groups?" she remembered replying.

"You know, like the KKK," she said Christopher told her.

"We both laughed and I said no," Rohan said. "He belongs to a neighborhood Harley-riding group of dads."

Hirschbeck, who lives in Poland, Ohio, said that shortly before Christmas, he encountered Christopher on a street in his own neighborhood. Hirschbeck said MLB was taking what the WUA considers to be a typical heavy-handed approach to umpires and that it would be brought up in negotiations for the next labor contract. The current deal expires after the 2009 season.

"Once again, baseball's favorite way of doing things: Ready, fire, aim," Hirschbeck said. "It's not a good way to start the season."

Looking to lock up an ace, Mets meet with Santana's agent

NEW YORK (AP) -- Johan Santana's agent and the New York Mets went to work on a contract extension Wednesday, the biggest step remaining for the team to complete its blockbuster trade with Minnesota.

Mets officials met with agent Peter Greenberg in Manhattan, but neither side would divulge many details. The two-time Cy Young Award winner is likely seeking a deal worth more than $120 million over six or seven years. He and the Mets have until 5 p.m. EST Friday to reach an agreement.

If that happens, as expected, Santana and the other players in the trade would then have to pass physicals for the swap to be finalized.

"Every team in the division became stronger, but now with Santana we're the favorites again," Mets left fielder Moises Alou said in the Dominican Republic.

The Mets have a good relationship with Greenberg, who already represents two of their players: All-Star shortstop Jose Reyes and reserve outfielder Endy Chavez.

New York general manager Omar Minaya declined comment through club spokesman Jay Horwitz. Greenberg didn't return e-mails seeking comment.

The Mets made a big splash Tuesday by reaching a tentative agreement to acquire Santana from the Twins for four prospects: speedy outfielder Carlos Gomez, and pitchers Philip Humber, Kevin Mulvey and Deolis Guerra.

The news energized Mets fans who were still upset about the team's historic collapse last September, and Minaya was lauded by baseball analysts around the country. Many had thought New York would have to give up more to land the ace left-hander.

"I can't really comment because it's not done. All I can say is that the Twins did what they had to do," New York Yankees senior vice president Hank Steinbrenner said in Tampa, Fla. "I hope it works out well for them. The Mets made a good trade from their end. Hopefully it works out for both teams."

Earlier this offseason, the Yankees also pursued Santana. They offered pitcher Phil Hughes and center fielder Melky Cabrera as part of a package, then pulled out of talks during the winter meetings in December.

The World Series champion Boston Red Sox also made a bid for Santana, proposing a deal that would have included outfielder Jacoby Ellsbury or pitcher Jon Lester.

Santana, who turns 29 in March, can become a free agent after this year's World Series and the Twins don't have the budget to re-sign him. Minnesota offered him an $80 million, four-year extension this offseason, but he turned it down.

Even without Santana, the Mets already have sold 1.75 million tickets for their final season in Shea Stadium, up 100,000 from this point last year, when they finished at a team-record 3.85 million.

"To have one of those handful that I would call an ace is obviously special to a team that, offensively, we look good on paper," Mets third baseman David Wright said Tuesday. "And our pitching staff is very deep, especially with these young guys, and they're only going to get better. So obviously there's a lot of positive energy, if it's true, going into spring training."

Now, the Mets just need to finish the deal -- something they couldn't do last season when Philadelphia roared from seven games back with 17 to play and won the NL East, leaving New York out of the playoffs.

Of course, giving a long-term contract to a pitcher can be risky. Only three have gotten deals worth more than $100 million: Barry Zito (San Francisco), Mike Hampton (Colorado) and Kevin Brown (Los Angeles Dodgers).

After helping the Mets reach their most recent World Series in 2000, Hampton bolted for a $121 million, eight-year contract with the Rockies. He went 53-48 over the next five years with Colorado and Atlanta and hasn't pitched in the majors since 2005 because of injuries.

While the Mets tried to lock up Santana, they also added depth to their bullpen Wednesday by claiming hometown pitcher Ruddy Lugo off waivers from Oakland.

Lugo was 6-0 with a 5.40 ERA in 38 relief appearances with the Athletics and Tampa Bay last season. Oakland claimed him off waivers in June, then designated him for assignment Friday after claiming outfielder Jeff Fiorentino off waivers from Cincinnati.

Lugo is 8-4 with a 4.39 ERA in 102 major league games. Control has been his biggest problem -- he has 74 walks and 82 strikeouts in 133 1-3 innings.

Still, the 27-year-old right-hander has been effective for extended stretches. He pitched in 64 games for Tampa Bay in 2006, going 2-4 with a 3.81 ERA and allowing only four homers in 85 innings. He held opponents to a .210 batting average during his final 24 appearances last year, finishing 4-0 with a 2.86 ERA.

The younger brother of Boston shortstop Julio Lugo, Ruddy was selected by Milwaukee in the third round of the 1999 amateur draft.

He played at Xaverian High School in Brooklyn, leading the team to the 1999 Catholic High School Athletic Association championship by striking out 12 and scoring the winning run in the title game at Shea Stadium.

AP Baseball Writer Ronald Blum in New York; Associated Press Writer Dionisio Soldevila in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic; and AP freelance writer Mark Didtler in Tampa contributed to this report.

Roger Clemens shows up at Houston Astros training camp

HOUSTON (AP) -- Roger Clemens bounced up the steps of the Houston Astros dugout Wednesday morning and faced a group of wide-eyed minor leaguers that included his oldest son.

For three relaxing hours at the team's minicamp, he was free from questions about steroid use, the Mitchell Report or his pending appearance before a congressional committee.

He was back in his element, baffling hitters with sliders and instructing pitchers on simple mechanics.

"I'm not going anywhere," he said. "I love to do these things. If I can share any insight with these young kids, it's all the better."

Clemens sidestepped questions about accusations he used performance-enhancing drugs, laid out in the Mitchell Report based on information from Brian McNamee, his former personal trainer.


The seven-time Cy Young Award winner has been invited to testify before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee for a deposition or transcribed statement next Tuesday and public testimony eight days later. McNamee and former teammates Andy Pettitte and Chuck Knoblauch also have been invited along with former Mets clubhouse attendant Kirk Radomski.

"I won't even discuss that," Clemens said. "We're handling that the right way. I've already done everything I've wanted to say, media-wise, on that."

Clemens said he was looking forward to meeting with the committee and reiterated the toll the allegations have taken on his family.

"I'm getting ready to go through the process," he said. "I get a chance to say my piece again. That's really all I can say. Everybody is doing well. We're grinding away and doing what we have to do."

Clemens, who pitched for the Astros from 2004-06, lives in Houston, and the Astros kept an open invitation for him to participate in the minicamp, a precursor to spring training next month. Clemens has a personal services contract with the team that starts following his retirement as a player.

Astros owner Drayton McLane said he was "pleasantly surprised" that Clemens attended the minicamp.

"He seemed to relax and enjoy himself," McLane said. "I think it really lifted the spirits of our young players. I visited with several of them and they said that was a great thrill."

Clemens' oldest son, Koby, is a catcher in the Astros farm system and is participating in the camp. Not even Koby was sure whether his father would show this week.

Clemens said the attention focused on him now was never going to deter him. He was planning to come back on Thursday.


"There was no decision," he said. "I was coming out whenever I could make time. This is what I enjoy doing."

Clemens threw for about 30 minutes from behind a screen. Most of the batters whiffed at least once, even after Clemens would call out what kind of pitch he was throwing.

Russ Dixon, an infielder, homered to right, then sheepishly put his head down to avoid eye contact with the pitcher.

"He was taking it easy on us," Dixon said. "I mean, I'd be lying if I said I wasn't trying to show my stuff. It's an exciting opportunity."

Koby launched the first pitch he saw from his father off the base of the right-field wall. Later, Clemens threw him a breaking ball and Koby swung and missed.

Brandon Backe, expected to start for the Astros this season, pitched when Clemens was finished. He threw about 40 pitches, then Clemens gave him advice off the mound on the first-base side.

Afterward, Clemens spoke to the minor leaguers in the Astros clubhouse.

"My biggest talk to them is, 'If you can handle failing, you're going to be all right, because you're going to do a lot of it,"' Clemens said. "You have to pick yourself up off the ground and go forward."

Tom Brady wonders why Plaxico Burress' prediction was just 23-17

A certain MVP quarterback thinks that's a Super-sized diss.

Tom Brady scoffed when told Wednesday that New York Giants receiver Plaxico Burress guaranteed New York will beat Brady's undefeated New England team in Sunday's Super Bowl.

"We're only going to score 17 points?" Brady said before chuckling about it. "OK. Is Plax playing defense? I wish he had said 45-42 and gave us a little credit for scoring more points."

Considering the Patriots set an NFL record by scoring 589 points, Brady's 50 touchdown passes were the most ever for one season, and Randy Moss broke Jerry Rice's mark with 23 TD catches, Burress might have been a bit chintzy.

The last time the Patriots played the Giants, in the season finale, New England rallied from 12 points down in the third quarter to win 38-35. The Patriots have not scored fewer than 20 points in their 18 victories, and the last time they put up only 17 was Dec. 10, 2006 -- a 21-0 loss at Miami in their last regular-season defeat.

Even if the Giants' defense performs at its peak, it's still doubtful New England will score only 17 points.

"I know they have confidence. They should have confidence," Brady said. "They are the NFC champions.

"I learned a lesson early in my career: No matter what you say during the week -- and God knows we say a lot this week -- we're going to be focused on going out and winning this game. We're confident, but I don't think we share our thoughts with everybody."

Burress did. And when he showed up 33 minutes late for the Giants' media session Wednesday morning, there was speculation the wide receiver was trying to avoid the spotlight.

Turns out Burress was spending time with his 1-year-old son and family at breakfast, claiming he was unaware so many people wanted to interrogate him about his prediction.

Nor was he aware, he said, that a hefty fine comes with missing a Super Bowl week media session.

"I don't understand what the fuss is about," Burress said, surrounded by at least as many TV cameras, microphones and notepads as Brady was two hours earlier. "Nobody wants to lose.

"All this is entertainment," added Burress, who was held out of practice Wednesday because of an ankle injury that has plagued him all season. "It's sports, and sports are entertainment. So 23-17 is the prediction I made, but the game still has to be played."

Told about Brady's reaction to that score, Burress said he wasn't disrespecting anyone.

"I'm not taking anything away from what those guys accomplished," he said. "They set all the records you could possibly imagine. They have a great quarterback, the MVP, who threw for a record (50) touchdowns. Randy set a TD record for catches. They had two receivers with over 100 catches.

"The numbers don't lie about what they have done."

Nor do the numbers 23-17 lie about what Burress thinks.

"Hey, look how much fun everybody is having with it," he said. "It makes national, international headlines. But the game still has to be played."

Giants coach Tom Coughlin couldn't have been pleased with Burress, but declined to say very much about him.

"I will speak with Plaxico in a private way, and that's where it will remain," he said.

New England played two games this season that were preceded by an opposing player's prediction. Pittsburgh's Anthony Smith guaranteed a win in Week 13 at Foxborough; the Patriots routed the Steelers 34-13. And after Brady threw an early TD pass over Smith, he verbally confronted the Steelers safety.

Days before the AFC title game, San Diego defensive end Igor Olshansky said the Chargers were unstoppable. New England stopped them, 21-12.

"We don't make predictions. We just let our play do the talking," Brady said matter-of-factly.

"Plaxico is a hell of a player. If he feels that way, I think that's great. I'd hate for him to think he's going to lose this game. It's obvious nobody does."

Burress was entitled to his opinion, Moss said, "but the only thing about a prediction is that you have got to make it happen."

"I think the pressure is more on them now, since they've guaranteed this victory. We've prepared very hard for the last week and a half, and we still have got a couple more days to get out there and tone some things up. But making a prediction that you are going to go out there and make it happen are very tough words to back up."

Not that Burress is backing down. He's done his Joe Namath impersonation off the field, and now he has to come through in similar fashion to what Namath and the New York Jets achieved in 1969: the biggest upset in Super Bowl history.

"Well, 23-17 was the first thing that came to my head," Burress said.

Then Burress looked at the numbered placard at the table where he was holding court.

"No. 23," he said. "How do you like that?"

JVC and Funai Elec to team up in LCD TVs: source

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese consumer electronics makers Victor Company of Japan Ltd (JVC) (6792.T) and Funai Electric Co Ltd (6839.OS) will jointly develop and supply LCD television sets, an industry source said on Tuesday.

The news pushed up shares of both companies, with Funai rising nearly 8 percent at one point.

Bigger rivals such as Sharp Corp (6753.T) have been forming similar alliances in the LCD business, where competition is intensifying.

JVC will supply LCD TVs made at a plant in Mexico to Funai, which will sell them under its own brand in North America, while JVC will market LCD TVs in Europe produced by a Funai plant in Poland, the source said.

The two plan to release a jointly developed LCD TV in 2009, the source added.

Funai spokesman Naoyuki Takanaka said his firm was in talks with JVC on a possible alliance but nothing had been decided. JVC spokesman Toshiya Ogata said nothing had been set.

Funai sells a large portion of its products in the United States through Wal-Mart Stores Inc (WMT.N) under the Emerson brand. Business with the U.S. retail giant accounts for roughly one-third of Funai's total sales.

JVC is set to integrate with Kenwood Corp (6765.T) after Kenwood and asset manager Sparx Group (8739.Q) in August acquired a combined 30 percent stake in JVC, taking the loss-making unit off the consolidated accounts of Matsushita Electric Industrial Co Ltd (6752.T).

Among other tie-ups in the industry, Toshiba Corp (6502.T) agreed in December to procure large LCDs from Sharp, which in turn will buy chips for LCD TVs from Toshiba.

Panasonic maker Matsushita plans to take a majority stake in an LCD making joint venture with Hitachi Ltd (6501.T), and Toshiba and will shoulder the bulk of the cost of a 300 billion yen LCD panel plant planned by the venture.

JVC shares ended the morning session up 5.3 percent at 180 yen and Funai rose 5.9 percent to 4,110 yen, both outperforming a 1.8 percent gain in the benchmark Nikkei average (.N225).

Blu-ray Disc--The New VHS?

Hello Blu-ray... adios, HD DVD. There was no doubt in my mind when I heard that Universal studios lined up with Warner Bros in its support for Blu-ray. Hold off on your calls and letters. I know--Universal is still supporting HD DVD too; see "Universal Denies Reports That It's Leaving HD DVD."

At the same time, if you read "Toshiba Slashes HD DVD Prices," you'll see that Toshiba appears to be dumping HD DVD players faster than Windows Vista users are switching to Macs. And Microsoft has said it couldn't care less about HD DVD (see "Microsoft: No HD DVD Xbox.")

Don't misunderstand. My decision is only in principle: I'm too cheap to actually run out and buy a Blu-ray player. Besides the cost of a player, I'd also have to buy new cables. Then there's the hassle of installing it and dealing with the schmutz behind the big-screen TV. So I'm waiting for prices to plummet.

I realize you'd rather do your own research. Sure, I agree, and here are a stack of articles for you to scroll through.

Dig This: "I should have seen that one coming." Among birders, there's a rule about looking up. Here's why. [Thanks, Moe.]

Dig This, Too: Your cell phone's outdated if it doesn't have a set of functions like this one. (Fair warning: Not suitable for children or adults who disapprove of "potty humor.") [Thanks, Shirley.]

Disc Players--HD DVD, Blu-ray, and Both

A couple of recent models--Samsung's BD-P1200 Blu-ray player and Toshiba's HD-A20 in the HD DVD camp--have great performance and reasonable prices, our Melissa Perenson says.

You might also take a look at our roundup, the "High-Def Video Superguide," which reviews scads of players and ranks the nine best available at the time into a handy chart. We did the roundup about a year ago, but most of the models are still around--and they cost a lot less now. For example, the Samsung BD-P1000 that started out at around $800 now sells for $500 or less.

Of course you can hedge your bets and get a combo player. Samsung has one--the Samsung Dual-Format High-Def Player Does Blu-ray and HD DVD."

Dig This:Here's a video of a bunch of Darwin Award nominees handling a difficult situation. It had me chuckling all morning. (And no, the dopey guy pulling the car from the bottom doesn't get crushed.)

Dig This, Too:Word Sandwich is an annoying game. That's because I had to think and reason, and went absolutely nowhere. The game plan is to guess a five letter word; you get hard-to-use clues. Lemme know if you get anywhere. [Note to Alex: I wasted 30 minutes; don't send me anything this difficult again, eh? Thanks.]

What Readers Have to Say

So in my blog the other day I asked loyal readers, "So whaddya think you'll do--HD DVD or Blu-ray?" Here's what they said...

"I'm all for HD DVD, but in the long run I see Blu-ray taking the ball...if either succeed. Video-on-demand seems to be taking off too. That's why this 'war' has lasted so long. Other ways have emerged to get movies now."--joker1231978

"The average Joe Blow does not want to spend a minimum of $425 for a Blu-ray player when he can get the HD DVD for $150 to $200.... Time will tell, but I wouldn't count out HD DVD just yet."--kasjun

"Blu-ray may outsell HD DVD.... [but] until Blu-ray also plays DVDs it can't win."--shanedr

"Just bit the Blu-ray bullet here as well, Steve. 'Lost, Season 3' on its way, first Blu-ray purchase, no looking back. My only quibble with the entire edifice is this:... I'm stuck with VHS and DVD and Blu-ray crap littering shelves and boxes in an attempt to have an 'authoritative' collection."--mattpeckham

(Matt is our gaming guy and I'm delighted to see he's reading my blog and commenting. Check out his "Game On" blog.)

"Universal is very firmly in the HD DVD camp, unless something has changed in the last 30 minutes. So HD DVD still has two very large Hollywood studios, and with Toshiba's current fire sale... things could change quite quickly. Consider that the overwhelming percentage of the public haven't made a decision either way (despite the blustery bravado of pimple-faced PS3 owners), but now might just pick up one of those HD DVD players for chump change. I wouldn't call this war over by a long ways."--dforbes

"This 'pimple-faced' PS3 owner is 33 with a PhD, and it is the centerpiece of my HE system. I picked up five of the $99 1080i HD DVD players from Wal-Mart, so it is not a problem for me who wins. However, I am pulling for Blu-ray, and I will be so glad when this is over.... The PS3 [which plays Blu-ray Disc] is one of the most underutilized pieces of equipment available."--Physics

I'd really like for you to chime in and join in on the brawl; click "Post a comment" at the bottom of this page. The only catch is that you have to be a PC World member to add a comment. If you're not already, don't fret: It's an easy, 2-minute process and you can Tips & Tweaks blog. Sign up to have Steve's newsletter e-mailed to you each week. Comments or questions? Send Steve e-mail.

Japan's Kyocera to exit China mobile handset market

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese electronics maker Kyocera Corp (6971.T) plans to withdraw from China's booming mobile phone handset market due to mounting losses amid competition from cheaper producers.

Kyocera, which plans to buy restructuring electronics maker Sanyo Electric Co's (6764.T) mobile phone business, said on Tuesday it has agreed to dissolve a joint venture with Chinese electronics parts maker China Zhenhua Science & Technology Co Ltd (000733.SZ).

The withdrawal underlines the failure of Japanese firms' strategy to sell high-end models with cameras and music-playing capabilities in a market dominated by lower-priced phones by giants like Nokia (NOK1V.HE) and Motorola Inc (MOT.N).

"We will strengthen our handset business through synergies with Sanyo in Japan and in North America," Kyocera President Makoto Kawamura said at a news conference. "We decided there was no prospect for our business in China."

The venture posted annual losses of about 700 million yen to 800 million yen ($6.6 million to $7.5 million) ever since its start-up in December 2001, he said.

Kyocera would hand over 45 percent of its 70 percent stake in the venture to China Zhenhua, give the remaining to another company based in Hong Kong, and also forgive roughly 850 million yen in debt, a Kyocera spokesman said.

The losses would be reflected in fourth-quarter earnings, he said.

Kyocera revised down its outlook for the year to March to an operating profit of 140 billion yen, down from a previous forecast of 151 billion yen, on sluggish sales of ceramic packaging used to protect high-speed fiber-optic microchips.

The consensus estimate by fourteen analysts polled by Reuters stood at 147.5 billion yen.

Quarter of Apple iPhones "unlocked": analyst

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - More than a quarter of people who bought Apple Inc's (AAPL.O) iPhone are using them on wireless networks other than AT&T's, the exclusive iPhone carrier in the U.S., a "stunning" number that will pressure the company's business model, an analyst said on Monday.

Bernstein Research analyst Toni Sacconaghi said analysis of sales numbers from Apple and AT&T Inc (T.N) revealed about 1.45 million phones were "missing in action" at the end of 2007.

About 480,000 of those were believed to be held by AT&T as inventory, leaving another 1 million phones, or 27 percent of the total, that Sacconaghi said were "unlocked" so they could work on non-AT&T networks.

Apple executives said last week the number of unlocked phones was "significant" but declined to give an estimate. Most analysts had estimated the portion of unlocked phones at under 20 percent.

Spokespersons for Apple and AT&T declined to comment.

The higher number is worrying for Apple because the company receives a cut of AT&T's iPhone service fees, revenue that carries a high gross margin and has fueled optimism over its earnings potential.

For example, Sacconaghi said, if Apple hit its sales goal of 10 million iPhones by the end of fiscal 2008 but 30 percent of those don't result in any carrier payments, its revenue and profit would be $500 million and 37 cents per share lower than expected.

If Apple cracks down on unlocked phones it could preserve its high margins but miss its sales target, whereas allowing them could erode profitability and make it tough to sign more carriers to similar revenue-sharing deals.

"Besides the financial implications, we believe the prevalence of unlocked iPhones presents a significant strategic dilemma to Apple," Sacconaghi wrote.

Apple shares closed unchanged on Monday at $130.01. Over the past month the stock has fallen 35 percent on concerns over consumer spending and what some analysts say are a lack of must-have products Apple has lined up this year.

T-Mobile adds nearly 1M U.S. subs in 4Q

NEW YORK - T-Mobile USA added nearly a million cell-phone subscribers in the fourth quarter, but full-year results fell short of its parent company's target.

T-Mobile USA said Monday it added 951,000 subscribers in October to December, giving it 28.7 million by the end of 2007. That's up 14.6 percent from a year earlier.

Shareholders last year called for Deutsche Telekom AG, the parent of T-Mobile, to sell off the U.S. unit. Chief Executive Rene Obermann parried those suggestions in June, in part by saying the unit aimed to add 5 million subscribers by the end of the year. T-Mobile USA added 3.6 million subscribers in all of 2007.

However, T-Mobile USA's growth outpaced the 9 percent growth in Deutsche Telekom's European cell-phone operations from 2006 to 2007, including additions from last year's acquisition of the carrier Orange in the Netherlands.

T-Mobile USA is a distant fourth in size among cell carriers in the U.S., behind AT&T Inc., Verizon Wireless and Sprint Nextel Corp. It's doing considerably better than Sprint, which is losing subscribers, but T-Mobile USA has a larger proportion of prepaying subscribers, who are generally less profitable. In the fourth quarter, 77 percent of new customers were under contract, compared with 87 percent a year before.

The carrier will release financial results for the fourth quarter on Feb. 28.

T-Mobile's German unit said has sold 70,000 of Apple Inc.'s iPhone since its debut in November. T-Mobile is the exclusive carrier in Germany, much like AT&T Inc. is the exclusive carrier in the United States. The German unit had nearly 36 million customers at the end of 2007.

In Britain, the company picked up 306,000 new customers, leaving it with a total of 17.3 million for the year, up 2.4 percent from last year.

Worldwide, the company said its number of mobile subscribers had risen 10.3 percent to 119.6 million for 2007.

Deutsche Telekom said it lost 537,000 fixed-line customers in the final three months of 2007, bringing its total number of land lines in the country to 31 million for the year, down 6.4 percent from 2006.

U.S.-listed shares of Deutsche Telekom fell 13 cents to $20.03 in morning trading.

Laptops Getting LEDs, Blu-ray This Year

Notebook PCs coming out this year will likely include more colorful screens thanks to LED (light emitting diode) backlights and Blu-ray Disc optical drives this year, an executive from Micro-Star International (MSI) says, as well as more environmentally friendly attributes.

But other technologies such as WiMax and SSDs (solid-state discs) probably won't see as much widespread use, said Sam Chen, director of notebook PC sales at MSI.

There are a number of new technologies people are likely to find more readily available on notebook PCs this year. For one, the size of the standard screen is likely to expand to 15.6-inches from the current mainstream standard, 15.4-inches, as users snap up notebooks with bigger screens, said Chem. And colors on those screens will probably be better due to the use of LED backlights, which are coming down in price.

LED backlights not only help create a better picture, they save power compared to current mainstream backlighting technology, CCFLs (Cold Cathode Fluorescent Lamps).

More laptop PCs will launch with Blu-ray Disc optical drives inside this year as well, Chem predicted. Blu-ray Disc, the high definition optical disc in line to replace DVDs, gained a march over rival format HD DVD earlier this year when Hollywood studio Warner Bros. announced it would shift from producing in both formats to just Blu-ray alone. The decision means five of the seven major Hollywood studios now back Blu-ray Disc exclusively, while the HD DVD camp has just two, Paramount and Universal.

On Monday, market researcher Gartner said that it expects Blu-ray Disc will be the winning format in the consumer market by the end of this year.

Currently, MSI makes laptops with either HD DVD drives or Blu-ray Disc drives inside. Chem suggested that in future, the company will likely only use Blu-ray Disc.

A few other technologies people may find in greater use in laptops this year is digital TV and better, 2-megapixel Web cams. Digital TV is growing, Chem said, and people are likely to demand it on more than just mobile phones.

WiMax, the wireless technology in line to replace Wi-Fi for wireless Internet use may be a function included in a lot of notebook PCs, but it probably won't drive sales because the technology is still to early, said Chem. Outside of some major cities, there are few WiMax networks being built globally, he said.

Energy savings will be one of the biggest trends this year, as companies vie to offer laptop PCs with better battery performance and more environmentally friendly materials inside. "This is an important trend. Al Gore's film 'An Inconvenient Truth' really pushed environmental issues to the fore, he said.

Red Bend Unveils Concept Linux Cell Phone

Red Bend Software on Tuesday introduced a Linux-based mobile phone that can be customized and updated with software and applications over-the-air.

Red Bend, a developer of firmware over-the-air mobile client software, partnered with several companies, including Digital Airways, Opera Software, Synchronica, Trolltech and Zi to create the necessary components for the phone, called Mast.

Mast is based on Trolltech's Qtopia application Linux platform and is implemented on Trolltech's Qtopia Greenphone, according to Red Bend. Qtopia is considered next-generation because it supports advanced technologies like unified communications, which links business processes with presence information, e-mail, voice mail, instant messaging, and videoconferencing, to facilitate efficient communications.

Earlier this week, the world's No. 1 phone maker Nokia announced plans to acquire Trolltech for $153 million. Trolltech's understanding of open source software is what attracted Nokia, which will use the Qtopia platform in its Ovi Web portal.

As part of the partnership with Red Bend, Synchronica is providing the Device Management Server for securely provisioning software on Mast phones. Meanwhile, Red Bend is supplying its vRapid Mobile platform for updating, adding, and removing individual embedded software components.

Red Bend said it tapped the other partners to demonstrate how software and services can be deployed and updated over-the-air on phones. For example, Opera's mobile browser can be updated using vRapid Mobile without revising the entire firmware image. Opera is a provider of Web technologies for mobile devices and released the latest version of its Opera Mini mobile browser in November.

Digital Airways has developed a Kaleido user interface that can be customized with different services when existing subscribers to carriers' networks insert their SIM card in a new phone. Zi's is offering dual-language messaging on phones through its eZiText application.

While Mast holds a lot of promise, it's only a concept phone for now. It will be showcased at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona next month.

Skyfire Shows iPhone-Like Browsing for Windows Mobile

In a development that makes clear the revolutionary impact of Apple's iPhone, a start-up company unveiled at the DEMO 08 conference a new mobile Web browser that may bring iPhone-like browsing to phones running Windows Mobile 5 and 6.

Skyfire, currently in private beta, makes mobile browing "just like" using the Web on a PC, the company said, even if sites are built with Flash, Ajax or Java technologies. What's more, the company said, smartphone browsing isn't any slower than browsing on a computer.

And just like on the iPhone, users can watch YouTube movies, interact with social networks and listen to streaming music, the company added.

'Real Web' Support

"For too long consumers have been promised the 'real Web' on their phone, only to be disappointed by slow rendering, error messages, no Flash support, watered-down WAP pages or second-rate mobile versions of their favorite site," Skyfire CEO Nitin Bhandari said. He added that Skyfire eliminates all those frustrations "at a speed not seen before." The Skyfire browser, he said, will "fundamentally change" how people use smartphones.

Chris Shipley, executive producer of DEMO, called Skyfire a "simple and elegant" product that addresses "one of the biggest pain points in the mobile experience today."

Skyfire's ability to let smartphones handle video could be a milestone in the growth of rich media on the mobile platform, currently at only 18 percent, said Seamus McAteer, senior analyst for M:Metrics. "Technologies that improve the user experience of mobile applications will bolster the adoption of mobile media as it becomes increasingly mainstream," he said.

iPhone-Like Browsing on 3G

Apple developed a special version of its Safari browser for the iPhone. While major handset makers like have rushed out iPhone copycats with touch screens and MP3 players, they have so far failed to match the iPhone's seamless Web browsing.

Coupled with a data plan from AT&T, Apple's exclusive carrier partner, iPhone buyers can browse the same Web sites they view on computers, not dumbed-down versions tweaked for mobile browsing with such technologies as Wireless Application Protocol (WAP).

But one of the major gripes of iPhone owners is that they are locked in to AT&T's poky Edge network. Buyers of Windows Mobile smartphones, on the other hand, can use the carrier of their choice, and many of those phones work on speedy 3G networks.

Protocol is Key

How does Skyfire do it? In press interviews, Bhandari said Skyfire spent the past 18 months developing an efficient protocol that Skyfire servers transcode every web page into. By having the servers recode the pages into a format the phones can handle, users experience fast, rich Web browsing.

"The delay added by the server is actually such a small percentage of the time we're actually saving ... that it's actually a huge benefit in the end-user experience," Bhandari said.

Skyfire plans to release a version for Nokia's Symbian platform within several months and support for other platforms is in the works. Bhandari said the company may develop versions for Google's Android platform and the iPhone as software development kits become available. As always, search and advertising are potential revenue models.

Vista's Growing Popularity Draws Hackers' Malice

With more people finally switching to Windows Vista, the operating system is fast becoming a target for security researchers and--surprise!--hackers.

Though Vista is generally more secure than earlier versions of Windows, hackers are increasingly finding ways through, or around, its defenses. Indeed, this is the first time since the operating system debuted last year that virtually every hole discussed in this column affects Vista in one way or another.

Exhibit A: Microsoft released three "critical" patches in December to fix security holes that affect earlier versions of Windows, including XP Service Pack 2, but they can also bite if you're running Vista.

One patch addresses four holes in Internet Explorer 6 and 7. (This "cumulative update" incorporates all previous patches, just in case you've slipped behind in your patching duties.) One of the flaws, in the way IE handles Dynamic HTML, was under attack when Microsoft shipped the patch.

The other two patches correct problems in Windows' processing of certain multimedia files. One fixes a vulnerability in DirectX, while the other closes a hole that the operating system has in its treatment of some audio and video files.

Whenever Microsoft labels a bug "critical," the vulnerability has the potential to leave you at criminals' mercy.

HP 'Quick Launch' Threat

More than 80 models of HP laptops have a security glitch in the included HP software for letting you configure quick-launch buttons. The flaw could allow an attacker to take complete control of your PC, if you are tricked into visiting the bad guy's Web site first. With proof-of-concept code out on the Web, HP released an update that disables the quick-launch software, called Info Center. Until the company issues a more complete fix, you can't use the buttons, but at least you'll be protected. If your laptop has HP Info Center, you must manually download and install the update.

Office 2007 Service Pack

The first service pack for Office 2007 is out, and it includes previous security patches, performance updates, and most hotfixes for Office 2007, as well as specific fixes for other annoyances. For instance, SP1 includes a patch meant to improve the performance of Outlook when you're working with large message folders. You should see fewer unexplained crashes as well.

Adobe Patches Flash

Adobe patched a passel of holes in its Flash Player. All of the player's supported platforms--Mac, Linux, Windows (yes, Vista too)--are vulnerable. Getting stung is as easy as visiting a site with a booby-trapped banner ad or clicking on an SWF (Shockwave Flash) file. Adobe is urging upgrades to the newest (patched) version, 9.0.115.0.

Bugged?

Found a hardware or software bug? Send us an e-mail on it to bugs@pcworld.com.

Nokia Grows Faster Than Other Mobile Phone Makers

Nokia was the fastest growing company out of the top five mobile phone makers and captured a large chunk of the global market in the fourth quarter of last year, while Samsung and Motorola continued to struggle, according to a report released on Tuesday by research firm iSuppli.

Nokia is the "monster of the mobile-handset business," as iSuppli puts it, having grown 26.5% annually and capturing 38% of the total worldwide mobile phone market share last year. Nokia's market share in the fourth quarter was 39.5%.

The No. 1 phone maker shipped 133.5 million mobile phones in the fourth quarter, up 19.5% from 111.7 million in the third quarter, according to iSuppli. It shipped 437.1 million phones in total last year.

Nokia remains a small player in North America, which is the company's challenge going forward. Nokia's market share dropped to 5.1% in North America in the fourth quarter, compared with 5.9% in the same period in 2006, according to the company's filings.

But it has plans to expand its presence in North America with the introduction of 12 new phones specifically for the U.S. market this year. Nokia already announced that it will begin selling the 8 GB version of its N95 multimedia phone in the U.S.

As a comparison, Samsung's market share in 2007 was 14%, followed by Motorola with 13.8%, Sony Ericsson with 9%, and LG Electronics with 8%. Both Samsung and Motorola lost some market share in the fourth quarter. Samsung's share dropped to 13.7% and Motorola's to 12.1%.

ISuppli reported that despite Samsung's drop in market share, it shipped an impressive number of mobile phones. Samsung shipped 45.3 million units in the fourth quarter of last year, which is a 45.1% increase from 31.9 million in the same period in 2006. Samsung sold a total of 161.1 million mobile phones in 2007.

The company struggling the most was Motorola. It shipped 40.9 million mobile phones in the fourth quarter of last year, but shipments were down 37.7% compared to 65.7 million in the same period in 2006. For all of 2007, Motorola shipped 159 million mobile phones, which is a 26.8% decrease from 217.4 million shipments in 2006. iSuppli attributed the decline to slowing demand for existing mobile phones, delays in introducing new products, and several other financial factors.

Motorola, however, recently said that it's trying to fix its mobile unit and hopes that a new partnership with Qualcomm will boost its mobile business. Motorola announced last week that it will design Qualcomm chipsets into some UMTS 3G handsets, which would compete with Nokia phones that use the European-developed standard.

Sony Ericsson was the only other phone maker to exceed the industry average growth rate in the fourth quarter, iSuppli said. It shipped 30.8 million units during the quarter, up 18.9% from 25.9 million in the third quarter, and 103.4 million units last year in total.

Like Nokia, Sony Ericsson is now focused on expanding its U.S. product lineup. A big part of Sony Ericsson's strategy is to get more phones into the hands of mobile users in the U.S., where several of its Cyber-shot and Walkman models are doing well, according to the company.

LG Electronics rounded out the top five, reporting the lowest sequential quarterly increase of 8.2%. LG shipped 23.7 million mobile phones in the fourth quarter and 80.5 million in total for 2007. Recently the company set an ambitious sales goal for this year, which involves selling $13 billion worth of products in North America.

Google Fixes Gmail IMAP Problem on Windows Mobile

Google said it has fixed a problem that was causing Windows Mobile phone users to receive blank Gmail messages.

In October, Google began supporting IMAP (Internet Message Access Protocol) for Gmail. That means messages that mobile users send or receive from their phones are synched with their Gmail accounts, appearing the next time users access their accounts from a computer. But shortly after the announcement, Windows Mobile users began complaining in online forums about problems.

In some cases, Windows Mobile users said that HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) e-mail messages showed up blank on their phones. Others said that while they could read message headers, all messages appeared blank.

Google acknowledged the problem and listed it on its known issues page. Late last week, some users of Windows Mobile 6 and its predecessor, Windows Mobile 5, began writing on the online forum that the problem appeared to be fixed. A Google spokeswoman said that it was fixed on Friday, although on Monday it was still listed as a known issue. On Tuesday, the known issues page no longer included the problem.

Google has also posted instructions for configuring the Gmail IMAP capability on Windows Mobile 6 phones.

Windows Mobile users don't have to do anything to take advantage of the fix, the spokeswoman said. They should simply be able to properly receive Gmail messages on their phones now, she said.

HDTV Buyer's Guide 2008

How much will it cost?

Just about whatever you want to spend. You can get a 19-inch starter set for $500, and there are even decent 26-inch units for as little as $700. Stepping up a notch, 40- to 46-inch HDTVs range as widely as from $1,200 to $3,000. If that's too pedestrian, the sky's the limit. For example, Sony has a 70-inch Bravia XBR that'll set you back a cool $33,000.

Who makes HTDV sets?

For starters, there's Mitsubishi, Panasonic, Philips, Samsung, Sharp, Sony, and Toshiba.

What are the best deals?

This is a constantly shifting landscape. There are several places to turn for information, and for hard pricing information. As to the former, Consumer Reports operates an HDTV blog, which stays abreast of both tech trends and buyer-oriented information. (Consumer Reports' actual ratings are behind a paid-subscriber firewall.)

CNNMoney.com discusses some of the pitfalls of the HDTV purchasing process.

Both CNET and PCMag.com have posted reviews of their top-rated sets.

Prices can be scouted out at the comparison-shopping sites Nextag and its competitor Pricegrabber. The two are often better used to get a feel for the market than for actual purchases; while many of the retailers they link to are reputable, a few have a distinctly fly by night aura.

Better to stick to major retailers, such as:

Circuit City;

Best Buy;

Crutchfield; and

Target (yes, Target).

Vendor Sites

Sony Bravia

Sharp AQUOS

Panasonic plasma, LCD, and projection HDTVs

Samsung's HDTV Guide

What is high definition?

HDTVs come in several different resolutions, but the best is called 1080p. This means a resolution of 1,920 x 1,080 pixels, with progressive scanning. Also available are HDTVs with the 720p display format, equating to a resolution which maxes out at 1,366 x 768 pixels.

Finally, there are 1080i sets. These have the maximum number of horizontal lines, but they're interlaced (hence the "i"). This means that all the odd-numbered lines are painted, followed by the even ones, resulting in a less well-formed image than can be obtained via progressive scan. (To fully explain this stuff gets into very arcane technical issues, such as vertical jitter.) The upshot is that 1080p is preferred, with lower-cost sets sporting the 720p resolution as a secondary option, if price is the primary consideration. Note that 720p isn't second-class, in that the picture is still light-years ahead of standard sets. However, it's expected that 720p will ultimately fade in favor of its high-pixel-count cousin.

How is the picture formed?

Far and away the most popular display technologies used to paint a high-definition picture are liquid-crystal (LCD) and plasma. The former are familiar to everyone who owns a Casio watch. LCDs work via a voltage that's passed within a sandwich of liquid crystals between glass. Colors are created using subpixels of red, green, and blue. LCDs are used on low-cost and mid-level HDTVs.

Larger and more expensive sets are fitted with plasma displays. In these, an inert gas trapped between glass gets zapped with current, creating a plasma which in turn gets phosphors on the inside of the front piece of glass to glow. This creates a picture, in a manner not all that dissimilar from an old-fashioned cathode-ray tube, which used a beam of electronics to excited phosphors deposited on the back of the TV screen. The early rap on plasma HDTVs was that they went bad after a few years; this problem has largely been overcome.

A third technology, called rear projection, was once a mainstay of larger sets, but no appears to be waning in popularity. Sony recent decided to quit the rear-projection market; Hitachi has also thrown in the towel on this technology. However, several vendors, including Panasonic and Mitsubishi, still sell rear-projection sets built using Texas Instrument's impressive digital-light processing (DLP) technology. TI's Web site accurately describes its DLP chip, which powers the sets by Panasonic and others, as "the world's most sophisticated light switch. It contains a rectangular array of up to 2 million hinge-mounted microscopic mirrors; each of [which] measures less than one-fifth the width of a human hair." Digital video is passed to the DLP and reflected by its mirrors, from when the image goes through a projection lens and onto the HDTV screen.

On the down side, the DLP projection lamps, which have to be replaced after about 6,000 hours, cost around $250.

High-definition television is taking center stage at the 2008 International CES. The consumer-electronics show will spotlight innovations such as Pioneer's self-proclaimed "world thinnest" plasma HTDV (it's only 9-mm thick), a fully integrated wireless set from Westinghouse, where the power cord is the only tethered connection, and even the first laser televisions.

The pervasiveness of high-def at CES emphasizes the arrival of a technology which is finally taking off, after numerous false starts and failed predictions that its ubiquity was imminent. Now, that moment is indeed upon us. HDTVs flew off store shelves during the recent Christmas shopping season, and the U.S. installed base now estimated at 30 million sets, according to TVPredictions.com.

Notwithstanding its rising profile, the fine points of HDTV shopping are still a mystery to most consumers. There are questions of screen size, resolution, scanning method (interlaced or progressive), and how the picture is created (LCD, plasma, or projection). Most importantly, there's price, with sets ranging from as little as $500 up to many thousands of dollars.

Fortunately, there's no longer the dearth of programming, which formerly caused many consumers to defer their HDTV purchasing decisions. All the major networks offer high-def sports and news, as well as dramas such as CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, and even many sit-coms. PBS's The News Hour with Jim Lehrer went high-def in December. On the delivery side, satellite-provider DirectTV is among the most aggressive marketers of HD, and traditional cable providers also offer the service to their customers.

Still, separating supporters' expectations for HDTV from today's reality isn't always easy. Many proponents of the technology continue to conflate high definition with digital TV (DTV). For example, the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA) recently pegged the number of households owning a digital TV at 50 percent. However, it didn't say what proportion are true high-def sets and how many are older, standard-resolution digital TVs. (Also in the mix, but rarely discussed, are standard-def models fitted with digital tuners. These are widely deployed; for example, all customers of Time-Warner Cable in New York City who don't have HDTV are using digital cable boxes.)

The CEA gave some harder data in its 2008 predictions, forecasting 32-million total DTV shipments and then stating that "high definition [is] expected to account for 79 percent of total DTV shipments." This would place the 2008 HDTV forecast at 25.3-million units.

Which means that now might be an ideal time to purchase yours. Accordingly, we've assembled this guide, which points you to some of the most popular options in the different screen-size and price-point categories. Before we get to the HDTV models themselves, let's go over some basic terminology.

More eBay Cautionary Tales

Often, when the words "eBay fraud" are spoken, they're accompanied by an accusatory finger pointing to the seller. But as I described in "Selling Your Laptop on eBay," buyers are quite capable of trying to pull a fast one, too. (My column detailed two different fraudulent attempts to purchase my Sony Vaio laptop on eBay.)

Since that column appeared, I've heard from several laptop sellers who say they've been victimized by fraudulent buyers on eBay.

This week I've included excerpts from e-mail I received from two such sellers. Next week I'll share tips I've gathered from sellers (and from my own experience) for safely selling your laptop on eBay.

To Russia, With Trust

James B. Furst of Eugene, Oregon, relates the following story--a tale not for the faint of heart.

"A few years ago, I decided to sell on eBay a relatively new Toshiba laptop my wife had purchased for me as a present. (I didn't need the laptop.) A guy who said he was an American living and working in Russia contacted me and bought the computer. He transferred the money to me via PayPal and I shipped the computer.

"A day later, eBay and PayPal both e-mailed me, claiming I had 'accessed the buyer's account fraudulently.' PayPal said it was going to investigate the sale. I sent them copies of all the e-mails that were involved in the transaction. In the end, PayPal accepted the buyer's version of what happened and gave him his money back.

"I tried to get my laptop back by contacting the Russian post office...but their postal system is much worse than ours. I even filed complaints with the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Internet Crime Complaint Center and the Federal Trade Commission. But it was way too late for them to do anything about it, even if they could have.

"So, I lost the laptop and the money."

In a situation like this, the buyer may have used a stolen credit card obtained through a phishing scam, says PayPal spokesperson Sara Gorman. Financial institutions such as PayPal are required to compensate consumers who have had their accounts fraudulently accessed and they may hold the seller or merchant responsible for payment, Gorman explained. That's why it's important for all sellers to carefully review and follow the guidelines of PayPal's Seller Protection Policy.

Hijacked to Africa

Crooks have been known to bid up an item as an eBay auction is ending, using unauthorized methods such as hijacked eBay user IDs.

That's what happened to Mary Lou Arnold of Fountain Valley, California.

"Twice in one week, our notebook auction was won by [someone using] a hijacked eBay account," she writes. "Our hijacker changed unused eBay U.S. accounts to a shipping address in Nigeria and bid up the auction in the last three minutes."

When the fraud was discovered, eBay deleted the listing, which denied Arnold the opportunity to extend a "second chance" offer to legitimate bidders. (EBay allows sellers to give losing bidders a chance to buy an item after the conclusion of an auction in which the item didn't sell. But when eBay deletes a listing, it's as if it never existed. So there's no way to send legitimate bidders a second-chance offer.)

"EBay has to do something about this, other than removing the listing," Arnold writes. "It makes bidders more unlikely to bid again on your auction because eBay does not give a reason to the bidders for having removed the auction. EBay should monitor older, unused accounts for, and protect from, this type of fraud."

Here's eBay's response to its practice of removing listings that end in a fraudulent purchase, repeated from my earlier column on this topic: "The current process where we cancel the listing is optimized around immediately refunding the seller's full fees (listing fee and final value fee). We realize that this solution can also have its drawbacks--specifically the inconvenience to the seller of having their listing removed and also the inability to offer Second Chance Offers to any underbidders, which is why eBay is always looking for ways to improve its services to its users."

Mobile Computing News, Reviews, & Tips

Apple's Light-as-Air MacBook: Jason Snell of our sibling publication Macworld has some first impressions of Apple's new MacBook Air ultraportable (which starts at $1799). Apple's latest bit of magic brings "incredibly small size to the MacBook line at a premium price," says Snell. He appreciates the little laptop's video-out capabilities. As for Apple's new Remote Disc software--which gets around the Air's lack of internal optical drive by remotely using another computer's drive--the software in Macworld's brief test worked seamlessly. Still, the MacBook Air has a whole host of missing features, as PCW Editor-in-Chief Harry McCracken reports.

Latest iPhone Alternatives: Apple's iPhone is still the smart phone du jour. But the iPhone's competitors are gaining on it. Among them: AT&T's Tilt ($400 with a two-year plan) costs as much as an iPhone but is more of a true laptop alternative; and AT&T's Pantech Duo C810 ($200 with two-year contract), which is as capable as the Tilt but feels more like a cell phone. For info on these phones, plus three more iPhone competitors, read "Five Ways to Get Over Your iPhone Envy."

On a semi-related note: What does the iPhone have in common with New York City? Find out on Traveler 2.0.

Iomega's 250GB Portable Drive: Iomega has upped the storage capacity of its eGo line of portable hard drives to 250GB ($230). The drive features USB 2.0 and FireWire 400 ports and is available in Cherry Red, Jet Black and Alpine White. No power supply is required.

Contributing Editor James A. Martin offers tools, tips, and product recommendations to help you make the most of computing on the go. Martin is also author of the Traveler 2.0 blog. Sign up to have the Mobile Computing Newsletter e-mailed to you each week.

Suggestion Box

Is there a particularly cool mobile computing product or service I've missed? Got a spare story idea in your back pocket? Tell me about it. However, I regret that I'm unable to respond to tech-support questions, due to the volume of e-mail I receive.

U.S. tops new tech usage ranking

HELSINKI (Reuters) - The United States, Sweden and Japan topped a new ranking that measures how well countries use telecommunications technologies -- networks, cell phones and computers -- to boost their social and economic prosperity.

Connectivity Scorecard, created by London Business School professor Leonard Waverman, and published on Wednesday, measured countries on around 30 indicators including usage of communications technology.

"All the other rankings mainly measure only how much have you invested in ICT (information and communication technologies)," said Professor Ilkka Lakaniemi.

Lakaniemi, the head of global political dialogue at telecom network gear maker Nokia Siemens Networks, which commissioned the study, said South Korea's rank in the middle of the table shows clearly the different approach of the study to other rankings.

South Korea is usually on top spots at similar lists, but Lakaniemi said this is mostly due to heavy public investment, while it falls behind in the usage of technology, especially by corporations.

"You have a lot of consumer applications, you have a lot of entertainment applications, a lot of this and that, but they do not really add much to productivity," Lakaniemi said.

The study said the top-ranking United States, which has benefited the most from ICT, was rated below 7 out of 10, mostly due to weak usage of vast broadband networks, indicating there is room for improvement for all countries.

"These results indicate an opportunity for countries to add hundreds of billions of dollars in economic benefit by rethinking how they measure and enable connectivity," the study said.

Russia topped the list for developing countries, way ahead of China or India.

"It will be interesting to see how in the next 10 years Russia will go down on this list and India up. You have an older population in Russia and a better-educated, younger workforce in India," Lakaniemi said.

The study -- which is scheduled to continue on an annual or bi-annual basis -- was conducted by consultancy LECG.

Following are the ratings for "innovation driven economies" measured in the study, scale 1-10.

UNITED STATES 6.97

SWEDEN 6.83

JAPAN 6.80

CANADA 6.50

FINLAND 6.10

BRITAIN 6.10

AUSTRALIA 5.93

GERMANY 5.52

FRANCE 5.07

SOUTH KOREA 4.78

HONG KONG 4.46

ITALY 3.85

SPAIN 3.56

HUNGARY 3.18

CZECH REPUBLIC 3.11

POLAND 2.18

Following are indexes for "efficiency and resource driven economies," scale 1-10, but not comparable with indexes for innovation-driven economies.

RUSSIA 6.11

MALAYSIA 5.82

MEXICO 4.37

BRAZIL 4.28

SOUTH AFRICA 4.11

CHINA 3.42

PHILIPPINES 2.38

INDIA 1.68

NIGERIA 1.01