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#1
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Coopertition award hint?
Forgive me if someone's already seen this, but Radical Pi on my team just pointed this out to me. Looking through the administrative manual, the cooperition award minuses the qualification score. There are two possible explanations for this:
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It is designed to make it easier for worse teams to win it, which seems unlikely, it shouldn't be a consolation prize. The second option is that better teams should win it, and a low score is better than a high score. What game is this true in? Golf. What year are we on? Based on a real sport year. What year are we on? A ball year. What are heavy game pieces? Golf balls. I have no idea how a game like this would work, but it all seems to fit together. Thoughts? Last edited by Grim Tuesday : 04-01-2012 at 19:31. |
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#2
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Re: Coopertition award hint?
It goes with slopes, and golf balls go at high speeds. They aren't very safe, however, which eliminates the possibility in my mind.
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#3
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Re: Coopertition award hint?
Nets around the field? That could be heavy as well.
The one final piece of the puzzle we haven't been factoring in is the Kinect. Allowing human control with it should help accuracy, so a game that requires accuracy, based on golf, with a different gamepiece could be interesting. We also haven't had a 'hording' (ie 2009, 2006) year recently, so lots of small balls are probable. |
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#4
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Re: Coopertition award hint?
I think more likely is that super-high-scoring teams are being penalized for this award. Think of Ranking points as recently as last year, where each team got the other alliance's score - so a blowout score of 100-to-2 was a disadvantage to the winning team, while a close game score of 52-49 was an advantage
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#5
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Re: Coopertition award hint?
The game doesn't necessarily have to use golf balls for it to be similar to golf. I think it could make use of a large number of different balls and play similarly to golf and use the same scoring style. An interesting find. Guess we'll just have to wait a few days and see.
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#6
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Re: Coopertition award hint?
That seems probable. It doesn't necessarily have to be real golf balls. Basketballs may make a good bigger system. They're heavy and bounce without thrashing quite as much. Golf would be fun.
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#7
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Re: Coopertition award hint?
Just to resurrect for current discussion a bills blog from a while ago, entitled 'The wooden beams have started creaking'
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#8
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Re: Coopertition award hint?
Great find Tuesday! (May I call you Tuesday? Grim doesn't seem like a nice name to greet people by. :\) While it is something to think about, I also like to stop and admire FIRST's doing this. It's a very interesting score, and can constitute for many things.
Personally, I think the Cooperatition score will be a large range of numbers (ie. 0-200), and then then the game score is subtracted from that. A larger range of Cooperatition scores make it so that low scoring teams with little to no cooperatition don't get it as a consolation, and high scoring good cooperatition teams can't get it either, because their high score lowers their score. This leaves behind the teams that didn't score very high, but followed the rules of FIRST, Gracious Professionalism, and Cooperatition that have an evened out score. Example below: Team 1 is a low scoring team with a low cooperatition score: Score: 40/100 Cooperatition score: 50/200 Team 2 is a high scoring team with a high cooperatition score: Score: 90/100 Cooperatition score: 170/200 Team 3 is a mid scoring team with a high cooperatition score: Score: 50/100 Cooperatition score: 160/200 Team 1's final score is 10 Team 2's final score is 80 Team 3's final score is 110 Because of this, team 3 who competed admirably and graciously, but did not score well, wins the award. |
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#9
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Re: Coopertition award hint?
Someone deduced (at some point in the recent past
) that the game pieces were small and heavy, based on one of bills posts. Basketballs aren't exactly small, but i agree that it could be a golf-like game with some other type of ball. |
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#10
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Re: Coopertition award hint?
I'm curious. How did they come to that conclusion?
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#11
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Re: Coopertition award hint?
From "The wooden beams..." blog post, and some unknown knowledge of the maximum volume of a pallet. I wish i could tell you who, or where, but my memory is slipping me and running a quick search didn't yield the source.
Last edited by Sean Raia : 04-01-2012 at 20:20. |
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#12
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Re: Coopertition award hint?
Hmmm... that'd be interesting to do. We could google the volume of a pallet for balls then look up the mass per pallet ratio and deduct the game element! Unless the element is ridiculous.
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#13
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Re: Coopertition award hint?
But wouldn't we need to know the number of elements on each pallet? Assuming you're trying to get the mass of each individual element from the mass of the pallet, and then try and find a possible element with that approximate mass...
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#14
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Re: Coopertition award hint?
Couldn't we find the number of elements on the pallet based on the volume of the pallet? I'm saying we could find the total volume each pallet could hold, then we could look up each plausible game element's weight and volume and calculate how much each pallet would weigh with each game element filling it. But then again, other game elements could infect each pallet making that impossible without knowing the mass of just the manipulated game element (avoiding the term ball because for all we know, its a frisbee). But it's still worth a shot? It wouldn't be 100% accurate by any means, but its better than nothing.
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#15
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Re: Coopertition award hint?
Lets do it.
Oh and also, in response to Supernerd256 above, you can call me Tuesday if I can call you Super! |
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