Well said Kyle.
It's Deja Vu all over again. Did Shivas start posting here again?
I wasn't going to get into this as its an endless rathole, but the proposed "solutions" are so impractical and impossible to enforce as to be laughable. As well as doing little to nothing to improve pace of play.
Tell me I can't line up a line at the hole, ok, I'll put it at 90 degrees to my line so I can line my putter face up to the line.
Say I have to have white showing at the top. Ok, I'll put the line at the back of the ball. I'll still be able to see part it.
I took a quick look at a Pro-V1 and I think I could even line up the dimples, although that would probably be slower.
Do we need to zoom in a camera on every putt to make sure there is only white showing?
What happens if I chip my ball to the hole or hit my first putt up there and don't lift the ball. Do I get penalized if the line happens to be pointing the wrong way?
All the questions above were rhetorical.
There are so many factors that slow down play it is crazy to try to single out one. For example, we all love tees that are close to the preceding green, but that is a factor in slowing play. Players won't hit to the green if the players are teeing off right there in front of them or walking off the tee behind the green. Players on the tee won't tee off if there is a chance that the crowd will cheer for a good shot to the green when they're in their backswing.
If you want to speed up play, the first thing that has to happen is to convince the PGA Tour that they want to penalize players. They don't. After that they should change their policy.
When I worked the Futures Tour, the first year we used policies similar to the tour. We had to ask the players to speed up, then we had to warn them, then we had to tell them they were being timed, then when a player got a bad time we had to give them a warning. Finally, if they got a second bad time we could penalize them two strokes. And then there was the time I tried to penalize a player and she claimed she hadn't heard me tell her they were on the clock so we rescinded the penalty.
The second year, we changed the policy. We told the players there were no more warnings. They were expected to notice they were behind and catch up. We didn't tell them they were being timed, but if we were following them, they could ask and we'd tell them. The first bad time was a one-stroke penalty, no warnings. We gave out 20 penalties in 19 events. More importantly, we knocked 25 minutes off the average time of a round. Most of the players we penalized hadn't bothered reading the documentation about the new policy and only one player was stupid enough to get penalized twice.
The second thing is to convince the players they need to be professional. At the 2010 US Open at Pebble Beach, I was the walking referee with Tiger, Ernie and Lee Westwood in the second round. We started on #10. We had a couple of rulings and some crowd issues. When we got to #4, the hole was open. Ernie looked at the other two and said, "We're behind, lets go". They picked up the pace without me needing to say anything and by the time we got to #6 tee we were waiting. That is professional behaviour and the tour players need to exhibit more of it. If it takes penalties to make that happen so be it.