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Re: Team 548 Einstein Statement
I simply don't believe the "protest" idea. The attacker could have indefinitely delayed the match by disconnecting a robot before the match itself started. This would have been an equally effective protest, but would not have risked affecting the outcome of the matches.
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Re: Team 548 Einstein Statement
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Based on multiple other reports, I'm going to give little weight to what the now-banned party says happened, and I'm not going to apologize for that. But I will accept Team 548's statement at face value, put it behind me, move forward, and strongly encourage everyone else to do the same. |
Re: Team 548 Einstein Statement
Lack of grammar is not the only way something can be poorly written. It's poorly written because it is not explicitly clear who is being referred to. Not explicit enough for the circumstances.
It makes no sense why anyone should talk about forgiveness since no party here has sought it or made extremely explicitly clear who is at fault. On a personal level, I find the use of words like 'unfortunately' in an apology to be less than genuine. Stating the intent of someone while simultaneously not specifying who that it is we are talking about is laughable. As is the double standard of an individual not representing a team at a competition, but we're all such loyal team players to preserving anonymity. On a related note, genuine apologies are rare in our society, so it is with a complete lack of surprise that I find many cannot identify one or misidentify it. Ah, but I digress. |
Re: Team 548 Einstein Statement
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"I've found that being outraged on behalf of others is often a misuse of energy." Whether you're mad at the Robostangs, the singular individual, FIRST, or life, lamenting about the state of the world's apology writing is not going to help. *I don't know if there is a member of Team 548 named John Smith, nor do I intend to accuse anyone on the team of being the anonymous individual. |
Re: Team 548 Einstein Statement
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Secondly, whether the individual made one attack or 100 attacks is a moot point. The individual's actions (regardless of intent) were malicious and he or she was punished accordingly. The job of the CD community is not to further scapegoat the individual for more attacks than he admitted to, as no proof exists. Instead, we should collectively be accepting of 548's generous apology (one they by no means had to provide) and we should all encourage FIRST to try and eliminate dead robots (due to control system failures) almost completely by 2014. |
Re: Team 548 Einstein Statement
I for one am quit satisfied with team 548 statement. Team 548 is also a victim in all of this. Having a "mentor out of control" can tear the guts out of a team. You have scars inside and outside of the team that takes years to recover. It is time to let team 548 work thru this and end this thread.
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We've heard 2 sides of the story so far, and unless someone would like to point out something I missed that puts them in direct conflict, I think it's only fair to evaluate this based on what we know. Everyone was feeling a lot of emotions at the moment, and the attack in response could have been from a moment of desperation. I'm not condoning what happened, but I am trying to understand it. |
Re: Team 548 Einstein Statement
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Re: Team 548 Einstein Statement
Two thoughts:
1. I can't imagine what next year will be like for the rookie members of 548. How does that conversation go? 2. I've yet to see a post from any of the directly affected Einstein teams in this thread (There is one on the first page from a Robonaut; it points to the article and offers no opinion on the subject). My first inclination is that they are coming together privately as teams to determine exactly how they feel about it; when they've grokked it in fullness, they'll make public statements as they see fit. My second inclination is simply there's nothing left to say. |
Re: Team 548 Einstein Statement
I'd like to start off by thanking the Robostangs for their statement. It takes a lot of guts to put yourself up in front of the Chief Delphi community. Your team still has as much respect from me as it did before.
One thing that no one has really thought of is the affects this has on the students that are part of that team. Regardless of what actually happened, how do you think they feel? I know that if one of my trusted mentors did something like this it'd take a long time for me to hold my head up high at a competition again. Arguing about whether or not the individuals acts were in good taste is pointless, nothing we say or do now can change what happened on Einstein. The same go with whether or not 548's apology was written by lawyers. Does it matter in the grand scheme of things? It is, after all, still an apology to the community. DISCLAIMER: This post is filled with my own thought's and opinions and does not necessarily reflect those of my team. |
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No one ever clicks on a list of networks again and misses the button? No one ever asks why documenting issues has to reach the public level? No one is ever curious again? No one ever considers using this particular ISM band again like this? I would feel much more comfortable with harsh punishment if you couldn't trip over this. |
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