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Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
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There is a small level of scouting you can do via a video feed but if you want to do it properly you need to physically be watching everything on and off the field. I am curious to see the 610 setup for their regional but I am still very, very skeptical. |
Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
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I don't think that the whole scouting team would have liked the secluded room, given that a lot of the fun is getting to sit as a team. |
Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
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However, given the choice of not having seats to scout or scouting via full-field-fisheye (henceforth known as F^3), which would you choose? |
Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
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Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
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Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
I don't understand the basic foundations of this discussion. It's the Championship-- stop sitting and start walking around.
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The premise is to provide scouts with all the things we wish our own scouts had at the events we've completed at. Of course the video/audio feed has to be good enough at the end of the day, but it needs to be good enough to identify the robots, and what they're doing. Having watched the streams from MI champs, and the HD WatchFIRSTnow streams, they were good enough for this, when they stuck to a fixed, full field view. With those streams and fixed views, I'm pretty sure our scouts could've tracked all the info we had asked them to record on our match scoring sheets. We're even going to share our own team's live scouting data on secondary a screen off to the side for teams to cross reference their own, and live rankings on a third screen, all right beside the large HD video feed, so you don't need to run to the pits just to see the rankings. I don't think any other event has tried this before, but I know our scouts will be lining up to set up in the ScoutCentre at the GTRW. |
Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
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I'll be competing at GTRW with the remote scouting room. I'll relay observations to CD. |
Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
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Sure, it's one more way that a motivated team can gain a useful advantage through their disciplined efforts off the field—but it's also an arms race in which the fanatics and the scouts will be keeping each other company for the lonely hours before sunrise. And while I suppose it's their prerogative, it's a little undignified and kind of overlooks the bigger question: is the first-come-first-served allocation of seats so essential to the competition (as a whole, rather than on a per-team level) that it couldn't be replaced with a system that is fair through randomness? If the few teams currently lining up very early lose their advantage, but everyone gets more sleep and less stampeding happens, are the event and the experience improved or degraded overall? I don't have data to estimate the relative benefits, but the costs to the event of enforcing an orderly line seem greater than the costs of assigning scouts' seats in advance.1 Also, lotteries are easy when you have a known set of entrants and don't need to do it in real time. The week before the event, with great pomp and circumstance, the regional director selects a hat and draws team numbers from it. A set number of that team's representatives are assigned to predetermined seating blocks in the order drawn. A slight improvement/complication involves the teams ranking their preferences for blocks of seating beforehand; when drawn, they get the most preferable block not already taken. 1 Despite that, I have to admit, I'm sympathetic to the teams that are annoyed when their scouts are beaten to the front row seats, and then have to endure sitting behind people that stand up and cheer for their team instead of quietly observing the match. I'd wager that the loss of productivity of the scouts in the 2nd row is greater in magnitude than the benefit the 1st-row team gains by cheering—and in effect harms the competition compared to the situation in which the seats were switched. |
Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
Isn't the solution for this problem a bit obvious? If there was someone with a FIRST volunteer shirt to walk around and tell off the most egregious violators of the "no saving seats" rule, I'm sure a lot of the motivation for the stampede to the stands would be gone.
In terms of saving seats, I'm not talking about a kid for holding a seat for their friend who's in the bathroom, I'm talking about the one person defending a huge block of seats like the people just trying to get off their feet are zombies coming to attack them. Those are the people that are causing a problem, and breaking a rule by the letter and in spirit. Most teams get up early and run to the stands because they know that if they don't: a, they won't get good seats to watch/scout/cheer, and b, they won't be able to get them later, because those seats will continue to be saved. If they knew that they could simply sit where there is room, rather than where other teams have not claimed, teams wouldn't be so motivated to get up at the crack of dawn or sprint to the stands. They would know that there would likely be plenty of fine seats left, and as they day went on, they could move up into better unoccupied seats. Of course, a lottery system or multiple coordinated entrances would be good ideas, but they'd likely take a fair bit of organization and work to implement. I'm not sure that they get to the root cause either, that people are very motivated to get to the stands as fast as physically possible to save seats for their team. |
Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
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Further, the entire seat-sprint-struggle is over just saving. I've seen it between groups who have their members, to the point of fights almost breaking out as one group tries to cut in front on another. There are better and worse seats, and the former can (and likely will, no matter what) be defined such that it's a scarce resource, so from an economic perspective the competition is built-in. |
Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
They really shouldn't have two divisions on the shorter side of the dome, that lead to a lot of clustering between Archimedes and Newton, Curie was perfectly fine, Galileo had a lot of spectators but at least everyone managed to find a seat.
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Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
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The only thing I could think of doing was work better to squeeze two divisions on the far side and far left corner of the dome, where you could still run into overlapping seating and have a division placed really awkwardly on the corner. Basically, I don't know how they could make that better. |
Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
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Just thinking out loud here, but I think it would be amazing if each of the divisions at the championship had the sort of video feed that's being planned for GTRW and it were webcast-ed along side (separate feed) the traditional webcast. At that point, it would open up a handful of different options for scouting, or at least provide a secondary reference for gathering data. I guess the most obvious problem here would be how teams on site would access the cast without some sort of public wifi or a 3G/4G/LTE connection, but even those can be worked around... I know I was able to stream eliminations matches of Waterloo over 4G/LTE while at another event this past season without issue. (There's also the potential of logging the full field stream throughout the day and splitting it for reference later - some teams already do this with personal cameras.) It seems like some other great ideas are being thrown around in here as well - especially regarding crowd control. Splitting each division/level up into it's own entrance or series of entrances would do wonders for organizing the chaotic 'mad dash' to the stands in the morning - and would hopefully eliminate some of the need to have a group of kids up as early as is needed now especially on Friday, since we know the scouts are going to have a late enough night as is. Also, last year, and possibly years before, there was a second entrance into the Dome/Center that was immediately across from Starbucks. Out of sheer dumb luck (or an appropriately timed breakfast craving) another mentor and I happened to walk through this door as it opened, and into the pits with a much, much calmer pace than if we'd gone through the main doors. One last thing, as someone that carries a backpack more often than not during events, I can assure you that I was asked to open mine each time I walked into the Dome/Center complex. The bag check is a necessary process, especially considering the timing of last years CMP, but I think it might benefit everyone if during morning opening, anyone with a bag/box/tote/etc were to go through a separate door than those without. That might help to cut down a bit on the stop and go as people are getting through the doors initially. (Not to mention that it should benefit those who are bringing in carts and things of that nature on Thursday morning.) |
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