Ski jumping at the 2003 Asian Winter Games
Ski jumping at the 2003 Winter Asian Games took place in the Takinosawa Ski Jumping Hill located in the town of Owani, Aomori Prefecture, Japan with two events contested — both men's. This was the first time ski jumping was officially added as a medal sport after being included in previous Winter Asiad programs only as a demonstration sport.
Ski jumping at the 2003 Asian Winter Games | |
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Venue | Takinosawa Ski Jumping Hill |
Dates | 4–6 February |
Competitors | 14 from 4 nations |
Schedule
F | Final |
Event↓/Date → | 4th Tue | 5th Wed | 6th Thu |
---|---|---|---|
Men's normal hill individual | F | ||
Men's normal hill team | F |
Medalists
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Normal hill individual |
Kazuyoshi Funaki![]() |
Akira Higashi![]() |
Choi Heung-chul![]() |
Normal hill team |
![]() Kim Hyun-ki Choi Heung-chul Choi Yong-jik Kang Chil-ku |
![]() Akira Higashi Yuta Watase Yasuhiro Shibata Kazuyoshi Funaki |
![]() Radik Zhaparov Pavel Gaiduk Maxim Polunin Stanislav Filimonov |
Medal table
Rank | Nation | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | ![]() | 1 | 2 | 0 | 3 |
2 | ![]() | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
3 | ![]() | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Totals (3 nations) | 2 | 2 | 2 | 6 |
Participating nations
A total of 14 athletes from 4 nations competed in ski jumping at the 2003 Asian Winter Games:
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gollark: There is also the "secondary processor exemption" thing, which caused the Librem people to waste a lot of time on having a spare processor on their SoC load a blob into the SoC memory controller from some not-user-accessible flash rather than just using the main CPU cores. This does not improve security because you still have the blob running with, you know, full control of RAM, yet RYF certification requires solutions like this.
gollark: It would be freer™, in my opinion, to have all the firmware distributed sanely via a package manager, and for the firmware to be controllable by users, than to have it entirely hidden away.
gollark: So you can have proprietary firmware for an Ethernet controller or bee apifier or whatever, but it's only okay if you deliberately stop the user from being able to read/write it.
gollark: No, it's how they're okay with things having proprietary firmware *but only if the user cannot interact with it*.
gollark: http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/stallman-kth.html
References
External links
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