Speedcabling is a competitive sport. Steven Schkolne devised the sport, which originated in the United States. In the standard rules, competitors are challenged to separate a mass of either six or twelve tangled Cat 5 Ethernet cables in the fastest possible time. Either two or four each of red 7-foot, blue 14-foot, and yellow 21-foot cables are tangled. According to the regulations, the cables are tangled by forming a figure-eight and placing them in a clothes dryer on high heat for three minutes. They are then allowed to cool.[1] Schkolne says this allows them to achieve a "natural" entanglement.[2]
First competition
editThe first speedcabling competition took place at the Machine Project art gallery in Los Angeles, California, which local web developer Matty Howell won. His prize was a $50 gift certificate for dinner at an Italian restaurant.[2]
References
edit- ^ Speedcabling regulations
- ^ a b "Close to the wire - the joys of speedcabling". BBC News. 2008-02-12. Retrieved 2008-02-12.