The new rules WORK.
Not for me they don't. Too many gimmicks all at once. Passing has become far too easy thanks to the car behind having an unfair advantage once within 1 second of the car ahead. I still remember when passing was an art and not a formality. I can't remember the last time I heard the phrase "last of the late brakers" used in F1. Used to be extremely common.
KERS is a gimmick aimed at making a sport which drinks huge amounts of fuel and produces a huge amount of pollution go green. You see the contradtiction here?
A bit offtopic, but I heard that the amount of fuel used in F1 over an entire season is still less than what a Boeing 747 requires to travel halfway across the world. Could this be true? I found it hard to believe, but I read this in an interview with Ross Brawn I believe.
Bear with me:
An F1 car today uses probably around 150 liters of fuel per race. 24 cars = 3,600 liters for the entire field. 19 races = 19 x 3,600 liters = 68,400 liters. Let's double that figure for practice and qualy = 136,800 liters. Let's double that for off-season testing = 273,600 liters.
A Boeing 747-400ER has a range of 7,670 nautical miles (14,205 km) with its maximum fuel capacity of 63,705 gallons (241,140 L)

14,205 km is not quite half-way around the world though (20,000km), thus, add another 100,000 liters = 340,000 liters.
