Kerry Washington talks about her love for swimming and the water on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon!
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Swim.com Partners with Pebble For Swimming’s First Smartwatch
With Swim.com, Pebble Becomes the First and Only Smartwatch with Advanced Swimming Functionality
Swim.com, the world’s most advanced swim workout and training platform, has launched its Pebble app, making Pebble the first and only waterproof smartwatch with swimming functionality available on the market.
The Pebble Swim.com app allows users to automatically track distance, pace, times, strokes, efficiency, and other key information over time by uploading that data to the Swim.com training platform. Workouts are wirelessly and automatically synched from Pebble to the web via the user’s Android or iOS smartphone.  The Pebble Swim.com app is immediately available for download from the Pebble App store and the iOS Swim.com Pebble Uploader App will be available from the iTunes App Store shortly.
Initially unveiled this summer, the Swim.com training site is the first-ever swim activity platform compatible with all the major swim wearables and has had several thousand sign-ups since launching in pre-beta in June to select swimmers across the U.S. During the first phase, the site has been available by special invite only, but coinciding with the launch of the Pebble app, it will be moving to open beta this week.
“We have seen tremendous interest from the swimming public since our platform opened for sign-ups in June,†said Davis Wuolle, VP, Product for Swim.com. “With the addition of our Pebble app, we now make our platform readily available to Pebble’s global community of users. And we’ve also opened Swim.com to all users. It’s all part of our commitment to be the leading platform for the entire swim wearable ecosystem as more and more smartwatches, wearables and other waterproof tracking devices are introduced.â€
Swim.com’s engineers have created programs using advanced algorithms to track workouts based on movement, strokes and pace.
“Our algorithm has been developed over years with hundreds of swimmers, thousands of laps and tens of thousands of development hours,†adds Wuolle. “These algorithms give us unmatched accuracy.â€
While the popularity of social fitness and workout tracking has boomed of late, never before has there been a comprehensive swim platform, which syncs data from a variety of the leading wearables in order to track, share and compare an individual’s workouts in the pool.
“The surge in early interest tells us that individuals are excited to be part of a digital environment that keeps them motivated, helps them track their workouts and allows them to share information with others online,†said Wuolle. “Compete, challenge and compare. That’s what we like to say Swim.com allows you to do in the pool.â€
Along with the Pebble, Swim.com currently supports the Garmin Swim, Garmin fēnix™ & fēnix2™ and Garmin 910xt, Finis Swimsense™ and the Swimovate Poolmate Pro line of products.
The core features of Swim.com include swim activity tracking, competition through leaderboards, the ability to share workouts and achievements through social media, and connecting with others in the swim community through clubs and facilities. Swim.com syncs the data collected by an associated wearable during a swim and displays it in a simple, clean and informative manner.
Swim.com’s parent company is Spiraledge, a San Jose-based technology company.
To stay up-to-date on swim.com, follow swim.com on facebook or twitter: http://www.facebook.com/swimdotcom, http://www.twitter.com/swimdotcom
Press release from swim.com
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Michael Phelps Arrested For DUI In Baltimore City
The Baltimore bullet has been arrested for driving under the influence in Baltimore City early Tuesday morning.
Michael Phelps was arrested around 1:40 a.m. in the Fort McHenry Tunnel on I-95 by Maryland Transit Authority police.
MDTA released the following statement:
“A Maryland Transportation Authority (MDTA) Police Officer was operating stationary radar on southbound I-395 leaving Baltimore City when a White 2014 Land Rover entered the radar’s area of influence at excessive speed (84 mph in a 45 mph zone). The officer followed the vehicle onto northbound I-95, through the tunnel and initiated an enforcement stop just beyond the tunnel’s toll plaza. Mr. Phelps was identified as the driver by his driver’s license and appeared to be under the influence. He was unable to perform satisfactorily a series of standard field sobriety tests. Mr. Phelps was cooperative throughout the process.â€
Phelps was arrested and charged with DUI, excessive speed and crossing double lane lines within the Fort McHenry Tunnel on I-95 in Baltimore. He was later released.
This makes Phelps’ second DUI arrest.
Read CBS Baltimore
Phelps has commented on Facebook …
Post by FB Newswire. -
Little Deer Gets Into Big Trouble In Encino Swimming Pool
A little deer got into big trouble Saturday when he went for a dip in an Encino swimming pool.
The deer jumped the 7-foot fence and then got caught in the pool cover and flailed around a bit.
The homeowner and two neighbors were able to pull the cover off but the deer had a tough time getting out of the pool.
After several attempts the deer was about to wiggle his way free.
See CBS Los Angeles
http://youtu.be/-x1srDZ9xFs
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Lewis Pugh – Swimming Through Garbage
The swims were intended to draw attention to the health of the oceans. But I seriously underestimated the urgency of the issue I was swimming for. As the United Nations Patron of the Oceans, I have given many speeches stressing the need to protect our environment for the sake of our children and grandchildren. I now realize it’s not about our children. It’s about us. And the situation is much worse than I thought.
I was shocked by what I saw in the seas, and by what I didn’t see.
I saw no sharks, no whales, no dolphins. I saw no fish longer than 11 inches. The larger ones had all been fished out.
When I swam in the Aegean, the sea floor was covered with litter; I saw tires and plastic bags, bottles, cans, shoes and clothing.
The Black Sea was full of Mnemiopsis, a rapidly reproducing species of jellyfish. This species is not native; it was brought in with the ballast on visiting ships, and has wrought havoc on the ecosystem.
As I was about to jump into the Red Sea, I asked the boat’s skipper whether I should keep a lookout for sharks. He told me not to worry — they’re long gone.
Read The New York Times
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The Trail to Triumph | Margaret Hoelzer | TEDxHuntsville
This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences. Ten-year-old Margaret began telling her mom how, between the ages of 5 and 7, she thought she might have been sexually abused by the father of one of Margaret’s friends.
Margaret Hoelzer is an Olympic medalist, winning two silver medals and a bronze medal during the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, China. Originally from Huntsville, Alabama, Margaret swam during the summer for Jones Valley Recreation Association (JVRA), Space City Swim, and for her team at Huntsville High School. Margaret later swam on the team at Auburn University, where she earned a degree in psychology, with a minor in criminology. Margaret is a public speaker on child abuse issues, and is the national spokesperson for the National Children’s Advocacy Center. In 2009, Margaret relocated to Seattle, Washington, and then to Fullerton, California, where she trains at Fullerton Aquatics with Coach Sean Hutchison.
Courtesy of TEDx Talks on YouTube
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Swim Team’s Punishment Outrages Parents
10 News digs deeper after parents say they’re outraged over a coach’s actions.
Pictures of the Osceola Fundamental High School Swim Team allegedly shows them being forced to hang from a chain link fence as a punishment.
Gina Jones took photos of her daughter’s hands that were blistered and sore from the punishment. Her daughter told her the swim coach punished the team for leaving things like water bottles around the pool. The punishment: hang on the fence for six minutes, and every time someone lets go early, start over.
“It should’ve been, ‘Let’s do laps,’ [or] running,” said Jones. Before the interview was over, this mom was on a fence herself, to see just how painful hanging there really is.
“I don’t think I could do it…” she says as she grips the fence. “Oh, I would be… I couldn’t do it for six minutes. That hurts your toes so bad… oooh.”
See 10 News
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Special needs kids buck the odds and learn to swim
Ever since 3-year-old Cobi Sky could walk, her mom’s been worried about her drowning.
She doesn’t worry so much anymore.
“I know she can survive; it’s just a comfort level for me that I know we are OK,†said Atiya Young.
Children with special needs are at an especially high risk for drowning, but they’re often turned away from swimming lessons due to health issues.
Now a Winter Park doctor is making sure all children can save themselves from drowning.
See wftv.com
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USC commit Patrick Mulcare reflects on Youth Olympics in China and knee injuries
Patrick Mulcare could not have predicted that the best swimming performances of his young career would come in the days after a dense layer of smog inflamed his throat.
Mulcare, a USC commit, was in Nanjing, China in August for the Youth Olympic Games. Amid the challenges of time zone changes, hours upon hours of travel and adapting to the country’s unique bathroom facilities, he shined in his first-ever international competition.
Once he acclimated to his surroundings and the throat irritation subsided, he became a finalist in four of his five events at the games and set personal records for best times.
See Oregon Live


