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#106
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Re: Practice bot morality
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#107
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Re: Practice bot morality
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I dunno, Andrew... you would have to convince a lot of teachers (who are lead mentors on their teams) that it isn't about teaching. Jane Last edited by JaneYoung : 27-01-2012 at 10:02. |
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#108
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Re: Practice bot morality
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I.E. if a hypothetical high school senior spent one afternoon watching the elimination matches at a regional, and that inspired them to go to college and be an engineer without actually gaining a shred of knowledge from the event, I think FIRST would mark that in the "win" column. |
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#109
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Re: Practice bot morality
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There is no doubt teaching happens, but it's not about that. |
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#110
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Re: Practice bot morality
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There is a lot of opportunity for learning to take place on an FRC team. There is a lot of opportunity for inspiration to take place on an FRC team. There is a lot of opportunity for growth to take place on an FRC team. That's what makes the partnership of the mentors and the students so powerful. It's also why the value of 'team' is so important. Especially at the FRC competitions. Right now, in this thread, there is an opportunity to learn from each other. That is more than just a beneficial side effect. For many, it is a hope. Otherwise, it is a waste of time. Edit: I see little red flags pop up when I start reading statements about what FRC is and what it isn't. If I want to help someone understand what FRC - is or isn't - I often use the FIRST website as a reference and cite it. Kind of like the game manual. Jane Last edited by JaneYoung : 27-01-2012 at 10:31. |
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#111
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Re: Practice bot morality
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At a regional you are limited to 30 lbs of custom parts, which is a number I wouldn't mind seeing reduced. At the same time I wish we would all go to a district like system. Just curious how it works on the other side of the fence. |
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#112
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Re: Practice bot morality
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Is it a nice side perk? Oh yes. I do this for the "Aha!" moment when students get a concept. But you'd have to basically get Dean and Woodie to tell me that FIRST is about teaching before I'd believe you about this. Last edited by Andrew Schreiber : 27-01-2012 at 10:43. |
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#113
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Re: Practice bot morality
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#114
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Re: Practice bot morality
Oh. I like this better. May I steal?
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#115
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Re: Practice bot morality
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You don't have to believe me. I'm aware of the confusion regarding teaching and inspiration and the opportunities that the robot competitions provide in promoting STEM awareness and in celebrating possibilities. There is confusion within the FRC community as to what FRC is about. I learn about the confusion on a regular basis by talking with mentors, teachers, parents, and students. The discussion of the use of a practice bot is an excellent example of what people think about FRC and what it is, in their opinions and their practices. I've also heard that FIRST is dope. For some, it is. If they understand what that means and how it applies to the program. Jane Last edited by JaneYoung : 27-01-2012 at 10:55. |
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#116
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Re: Practice bot morality
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Getting on my soapbox here for a minute about "elite" vs. non elite and what that means to winning, because I have a pretty good personal example. I was a member of Team 40 and 190 basically from 1995-2006 (off and on, but you get the point) Well established teams, full machine shops, good sized budgets etc. On 40 we had access to a full shop as well as numerous CNC machines that the kids can program and run because intelitek makes educational CNC equipment. I was used to designing and building 100% custom machined robots and ordering pretty much whatever I wanted. I don't think I need to post about the success of either of those 2 teams. 2009 - I get a new job, I now live in Tennessee and start team 2775 with Greg Needel. We have about $3000 to build the robot, nothing fancier than a band saw and drill press and a small closet out of which we can work in and all brand new kids many of whom had never used a screwdriver before (not exaggerating here). We were finalists (3rd overall pick) in 2009 to 16&71 and Rookie All-Stars in St. Louis and picked by 1717 at Champs and finalists on Galileo to the eventual champs. In 2010 we won St. Louis (first overall pick) and also made elim's at Champs and won a few awards on the way. How did we do it? It wasn't with money or fancy machining because we didn't have either of those things. It was with organization, knowing HOW to build a robot in 6 weeks, building a very cheap practice robot, keeping everything as dirt simple as possible (for money and manufacturing reasons) and practice practice practice. We won and did well because our drive team had tons of practice. We had a very small budget, it was worth it to direct 1/3 of it towards a practice robot and lower the overall amount we could spend on the competition bot. And you have to be organized. You have to come to each meeting with a plan, and materials. It takes as much time to organize a build season as it does to build a robot...that is the most important piece that alot of teams are missing. You think being elite means being a well oiled machine, well yeah, it does, but that doesn't happen by accident. It's being the well oiled machine that makes you a better team, not the other way around. So please stop complaining that it's not fair. It's not, but you can still be very successful if you make the right choices with the resources you have. The robots we built in 2009 and 2010 can be built by ANY team, it's more about decision making than what you do or don't have. |
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#117
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Re: Practice bot morality
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That being said, it took us a good portion of Friday to work out all of the kinks of the new system, so it may have hurt us a bit. A team rebuilding their robot during an unbag window could run into the same issues if proper time isn't left for integration. So yes, you could swap parts from a practice robot to a competition bot in a pinch, but the real question to ask yourself is how smoothly will the system integration go? Two robots, even 'identical' ones will have their own quirks and require their own tuning to reach maximum efficiency. (Manufacturing Tolerances, Differences in weight, Differences between new and used parts, etc contribute to the differences between two 'identical' machines) |
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#118
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Re: Practice bot morality
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#119
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Re: Practice bot morality
WoW! This thread has gone from the Morality of building two robots to stealing and many, many issues in between.
My bottom line. End the 6 weeks and all or most of this goes away. We can debate this to death ( has been on old threads dating back 15 years of CD), and there are always great opinions and rational for both sides of this subject. No one is wrong or right as there are good and bad.... this is the fun part. I thought I would join this Great thread and be part of the ongoing dialog of one of the GREATEST debates in CD history. |
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#120
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Re: Practice bot morality
I Disagree with the idea of a practice bot. I have no issue if you use a previous robot, but to build a new robot, a replica of your newly built FIRST bot, just to practice with seems to violate the idea of the 6 week build.
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