Boy, 17, crowned America's fastest texter

  • Najib breathes easier after Dr Mahathir pow-wow
    Najib breathes easier after Dr Mahathir pow-wow

    It has been a roller-coaster ride for Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak (pic left) since he led the Barisan Nasional to victory at the May 5 general election but without achieving his own benchmark: restoring its two-thirds control of Parliament. …

  • Dr Mahathir regrets Internet freedom
    Dr Mahathir regrets Internet freedom

    Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad admitted today he might have made a mistake in giving guarantees for Internet freedom, which has been blamed for empowering and enabling opposition parties to win more seats in the 13th general election. …

  • Time to re-look at ETP and NKEA, says corporate leader
    Time to re-look at ETP and NKEA, says corporate leader

    It is time for the country to re-look at the Economic Transformation Programme (ETP) and the National Key Economic Areas (NKEA) programmes in order to evaluate the effectiveness of the government plans in actually boosting the country's economy. …

  • How Umno exploits fears of Pakatan among Malays
    How Umno exploits fears of Pakatan among Malays

    INTERVIEW Umno has successfully exploited the fears many Malays that a stronger Pakatan Rakyat would mean a dominant DAP, said PAS central committee member Dr Dzulkefly Ahmad. …

  • Goodbye to the national car, Proton
    Goodbye to the national car, Proton

    The last vestiges of the national car project will disappear as soon as Putrajaya replaces its fleet of ageing Proton Perdana V6 limousines with Honda Accords, while the Pahang government has opted for the Volkwagen Passats. …

A 17-year-old boy retained his title as America's fastest texter Wednesday in a duel of the thumbs staged before yelling fans in New York's Times Square.

Austin Weirschke took home $50,000 in prize money for the second time in two years when he bested 10 other texting demons in feats of thumb speed, memory and fluency in texting shorthand.

One round was performed with contestants blindfolded and having 45 seconds to type the verse: "Twinkle, twinkle, little star, how I wonder what you are, up above the world so high, like a diamond in the sky."

The event, sponsored by LG Electronics and using the company's cell phones, took place on a traffic island in Times Square.

About 200 onlookers, including cheering relatives and mostly teenage texting aficionados, gathered around the stage.

Weirschke said he became a prolific texter thanks to practice with his mother, whom he dubbed "my texting coach."

But when asked to describe his victory, he must have wished he could text his reply. Facing a microphone, the humble winner could only manage: "I don't really know what to say."

Weirschke faced some mean competition -- 10 whiz kids from around the country, with the oldest just 24 years old and the majority in their teens.

Several contestants said they typically send hundreds of texts a day. But far from wasting their time gossiping over the miniature keyboard, these youngsters were in the cellphone equivalent of a harsh training camp.

"It's like the Olympics of texting," the upbeat presenter of the event said.

One young female contestant theatrically fanned herself in the New York summer heat, worrying after one round that she'd slipped up and lost the chance for that $50,000 check.

"I accidentally added a letter," she said. "It could change your life."

Another said: "I feel like I'm having a heart attack."

The last two survivors of the elimination rounds, Weirschke and Kent Augustine, 16, shook hands solemnly before their final sudden-death bout.

Winning the texting championship has made Weirschke something of a star in his world.

"It's been crazy. I've got to have done a lot of stuff a normal 17-year-old might never get to do in his life," he said, mentioning being flown to Los Angeles and doing media interviews.

Loading...

Comments on Yahoo! pages are subject to our link to Comments Guidelines. You are responsible for any content that you post. Yahoo! is not responsible or liable in any way for comments posted by its users. Yahoo! does not in any way endorse or support comments made by its users.