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Unread 19-08-2005, 13:27
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AmyPrib AmyPrib is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2004
Rookie Year: 2003
Location: Indianapolis, IN
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Re: Help us launch the network!

You might check these links, many answers and suggestions talked about a lot.

http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...ad.php?t=34772

http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...ad.php?t=37693

http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...ad.php?t=37216

http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...ad.php?t=35916

http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...ad.php?t=33457

http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...ad.php?t=34430

And those are just on the first page in the "Scouting" forum. Check them out.

Scouting is for anything and everything and I feel it is an extremely important part of doing well during matches. It's for watching team's consistency, their strategy of play, to size up your own strategy, to know what a team can or can't do, regardless of what they tell you in the pits, to strategize with your partners and against your opponents, etc.

Ours is done on paper, we have tried other methods, but always come back to that. We do pit scouting (to get the technical aspects of every team's robot), and we do match scouting (to get the play aspects of a team and their robot). Match scouting sheets change each year to fit the game. Pit scouting is done on Thursday. Match scouting goes all day Friday and Saturday until elims. Depending on what type of scouting you do and how detailed you get, you can have one scout per robot on the field during any match.

Our scouting is effective. It is important to know other team's capabilities, strategy, and consistency. I feel it is not as effective to only know straight statistics on team's performances, as it is to know the things I mention in the first sentence. Standings are not as important because they could just be unlucky with partners, but have a very well performing robot of their own.

The key is, if you're in alliance picking, to choose a robot that is COMPATIBLE to your own, one that maybe does something you can't do. So you would figure out what that is, and you might scout those teams closer. Rankings, and objects scored won't tell you that kind of info... (not saying we don't use that info, but it's not always the highest priority info). I think most teams scout every other team, and maybe narrow it down the second day.

We never give up scouting. No matter what our standing is going into Saturday, you never know what will happen, and if a team chooses you, you could be a hero for having all kinds of detailed info on your opponents. Plus, it gets the students (and adults) familiar with other teams. You might just see those robots again someday.
__________________

Co-Chair Boilermaker Regional Planning Committee 2004-2011
2008 St. Louis Regional Finalists and Engineering Inspiration Award
2007 St. Louis Regional Champions - Thanks 1444 & 829! / St. Louis and Boilermaker Quality Award
2006 Boilermaker Chairman's Award
Referee - IRI - 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008
2005 Midwest Regional - Semifinalist, Engineering Inspiration Award, and Safety Award / Boilermaker Regional - Judges Award
2004 Midwest Regional Champions - Thanks 269 and 930! / IRI Runner-Up - Thanks to 234 and 447!!!
2004 Championship: Archimedes Finalist - Thanks 716 and 1272!
"We are going to be praised and criticized more than we deserve. We are not to be affected by either." ~ co-worker

Last edited by AmyPrib : 19-08-2005 at 13:42.