|
|
|
![]() |
|
|||||||
|
||||||||
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools |
Rating:
|
Display Modes |
|
|
|
#1
|
||||
|
||||
|
Re: Ruling on Robonauts Balance
I'm glad you guys had a 'plan B' (as I knew you would -- you guys are class acts all the way), because I never in the world dreamed it would be ruled legal, especially given the 'astute observer' definitions in the Q&A.
Please keep in mind that designs like this put the Q&A folks in a difficult situation -- they can't possibly anticipate every solution that a team can dream up, and so the intentionally broad definition criteria of 'astute observer' (which I personally find to be completely reasonable) gives them wiggle room to do exactly as we are instructed to: interpret the spirit of the game, and not try to squeeze every advantage out of the letter. If FIRST is going to co-opt the sports model successfully, they must at almost all costs avoid the audience thinking, "I thought that was cheating?" Designs based on letter-of-the-rule interpretations will therefore always be a major risk, and perhaps an even bigger risk than they have been in the past. Yes, there is a cost in ingenuity; but if FIRST is to become a true culture-transforming spectator sport, it can't also be a 100% proscriptive rules set game. (Most games are permissive. Proscriptive games are much more open-ended... which is what makes them harder to follow, and thus gives them less mass appeal.) My favorite quote applies here: "It's a wonderful idea. But it doesn't work." |
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
|
Re: Ruling on Robonauts Balance
Quote:
Everything Mr. Freivald has said is 100% accurate. There is no way the GDC can predict everything, so therefore the answer to that is to have FIRST be a little less proscriptive, and a little more permissive. I'd say 50-50 for each. While you don't want too much strained and controlled rules, you don't want the rules to lack clarity enough that events like 118 this year happen. I'm sure no team wants to spend time during their build season designing, manufacturing, and perfecting a mechanism deemed illegal because of a lack of clarification. Last edited by Andrew Lawrence : 03-03-2012 at 01:19. Reason: Forgot pfreivald is a mentor, awkward calling him by his first name... |
|
#3
|
||||
|
||||
|
Re: Ruling on Robonauts Balance
Absolutely. I stole it from Poe, who "sampled"/stole it from a lecture given by her father, the tape of which she found some years after he passed away.
I'd say that game theory is a lot more complicated than that. Almost all games are permissive, because it's much easier to write a permissive rules set than it is to write a proscriptive one. FIRST has historically been more proscriptive than permissive, but every sport in the world is permissive. The most interesting (IMNHO) games (mathematically and strategically) are proscriptive, but they don't garner much of a following a lot of the time because they're often hard to follow, hard to predict, hard to manage... As someone who has made some small amount of money doing freelance game design, I can really, truly admire just how well FIRST has skirted the line between a permissive and a proscriptive rules set. Designing a technical challenge that encourages ingenuity and creativity lends itself strongly toward a proscriptive rules set. Designing a game that's fun to watch for an audience not obsessed with the game requires a strongly permissive rules set. The balance is insanely hard to meet, and I have so very much admiration for the GDC for doing so yearly as well as they have. In recent years, FIRST rules have tended more toward a permissive rules set. If they want the game to be spectator-friendly, they have to. That said, they have kept the design side of the robot very proscriptive, which is why you see wheel-shooters and catapults and sling-shots, and you see tank drives and drop-center drives and swerve drives and mecanum drives and octocanum drives... Give credit where credit is due: there are a lot of companies that do nothing but design games for a living. None of them have a single team of a dozen-ish people put out a completely new and innovative product on a yearly basis. The GDC does. Hats off to the Robonauts for an extremely innovative and interesting solution to an engineering problem. Hats off to the GDC for sticking to the game they designed (and the philosophy behind it) and ruling against them. Ya both done good. |
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
|
Re: Ruling on Robonauts Balance
Can anyone post a video of them balancing? I mean, this is not the first time FIRST has had issues with miscommunication.
|
|
#5
|
||||
|
||||
|
Re: Ruling on Robonauts Balance
I want to thank team 118 for not only building such an innovative design, but posting it in their reveal video for all to see. I would also like to thank them for going to a week 1 regional, which forced a long overdue ruling to be made.
I know there is quite a few teams scrapping designs right now but at least now they can all go into their next competition without taking as big of a risk(at least from hanging). PS. If its Finals 2 and 118's alliance is up by one, with <20seconds left with a score of 20+ the opposition, they should definitely hang anyway(give the crowd a show). ![]() |
|
#6
|
|||
|
|||
|
Re: Ruling on Robonauts Balance
Quote:
You were also absolutely awesome for explaining in detail how the system works. That is truly inspirational for kids like me. Thank you and best of luck this weekend. |
|
#7
|
|||
|
|||
|
Re: Ruling on Robonauts Balance
This is what happens when the GDC (or anyone else) tries to make "common-sense" rules or "simple" rules or anything of the sort. Discussion about "rules lawyering" or whatever misses the point: rules need to be clearly defined and as comprehensive as possible, or there's no point in having them. Otherwise you end up with differing interpretations and that very rarely ends well.
|
|
#8
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
Re: Ruling on Robonauts Balance
Quote:
The rules need to be a) clear, b) as comprehensive as necessary to communicate the intent of the rules, and c) written clearly. But the questions about interpretations need to be answered promptly and clearly. Not "we're using the common sense definition of 'grapple'" or "We don't give design reviews". More like "We are using the following definition of 'grapple'..." and "We don't give design reviews; however, you may want to pay close attention to the following rules..." The GDC neither declared the concept legal nor declared it illegal. They simply said, "We aren't going to make the call." Then, it seems that they decided to make the call... a month and a half after it was asked, and a few weeks after declining to provide a specific definition of "grapple", "grasp", and "attach". This is not the first time this sort of thing has happened (and yes, I can cite instances); however, the real question is, how do we keep it from happening again? |
|
#9
|
|||
|
|||
|
Re: Ruling on Robonauts Balance
OP couldn't have stated this any better. You took a risk, and it got called illegal. But you handled it very well. +1 for you guys, I'm impressed.
On the GDC side of things, ruling it illegal is 100% okay to do. But being extremely vague on definitions of things like "grappling" and "balanced" and what consists of the bridge until the final week/first day of competitions is..I can't even think of a word for it. If they were made clear from the start, and if they wouldn't beat around the bush with these "we can't comment on designs" answers, none of this would have happened. Even in this case, if they couldn't comment on the design, they could at least clarify what consists of clamp/grasping/whatever. And then stick with that definition, and not change it when someone thinks outside of the box with a design that still fits those parameters. even something as flat out as "no, you cant hang off the side of the bridge." Nothing to lawyer there. Something just has to be done about that, at least I think. Its okay to change rules, just not so late in the season after you refused to clarify them a million times. 2c. Last edited by Brandon_L : 03-03-2012 at 03:19. |
|
#10
|
||||
|
||||
|
Re: Ruling on Robonauts Balance
Quote:
The robonaut's device is ingenious (dare I say awesome). It was risky for consuming mass on the robot, money, time and effort etc. But the ramifications of it not working (or being illegal) was near zero because the robot is awesome without the feature. So risk of effort times risk of result is still near zero and they went for it. It was kewl to see it in action! |
|
#11
|
||||
|
||||
|
Re: Ruling on Robonauts Balance
Quote:
Quote:
They've been using "reasonably astute observer" definitions for years as a way to essentially say, "Look, folks, it's impossible to create a positivist document. Not difficult, not really hard, but actually impossible. So we're not going to try to do that. Be creative, but do so within the spirit of the competition-as-sport that we've set up." And The Robonauts did indeed create an awesome device with minimal risk -- it's not like they can't balance without it. |
|
#12
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
Re: Ruling on Robonauts Balance
Some thoughts:
1) Yes, 118 is taking this design to the very limit of the rules (though, in my mind, never quite over). 2) Yes, the GDC should be more clear in these edge cases. (Not the "Can we use the F-P motor to raise our shooter up to get a closer shot?" questions, but you know what I mean.) 3) Yes, I'd love to read the GDC's position on the whole matter. 4) I'm a touch surprised, but eminently pleased that we made it to Week 1 of competitions before we reached a rule or ruling that made me want to say "Paging the IRI Planning Committee..." 5) No, I still don't want to be on the other side of the glass from these guys. |
|
#13
|
||||
|
||||
|
Re: Ruling on Robonauts Balance
Has anybody done a stress analysis on the actual bridge structure to see if it could withstand suspensions from the side? As thorough as they are, I'd assume 118 has done so but I haven't seen evidence.
That's a pretty incredible moment arm for that part of the bridge to support; if the same part of the bridge was used to suspend several times during a regional, and several regionals during a season, it's possible for that component to fail. Can you imagine the (figurative and literal) carnage that would follow if the bridge broke during eliminations? Possibly leading to field, robot, even site damage? Screams of "We were balanced until the field failed - we should be given those points!" Are there spare bridges shipped with the field? What if a particularly innovative team coupled 118's design with 1501 - allowed a robot to drive upon it, then balanced on the side of the bridge? There's no way the structure could support that. The GDC made the ruling that had to be made. Sometimes the game has to be played in real time to really understand the rules - it's happened before. That's why we have team updates on Tuesdays and Fridays. I agree the timing is poor in this circumstance. Kudos to 118 for everything. |
|
#14
|
||||
|
||||
|
Re: Ruling on Robonauts Balance
Yes, having set the field up in New Jersey, each field has a spare bridge, spare back boards, spare hoops, spare plexiglass for the player's station and a spare barrier. There is also an entire extra backup field ready to go in the case of some catastrophic accident with a truck catching on fire or freak meteor showing destroying a building.
Last edited by Jim Giacchi : 03-03-2012 at 16:31. |
|
#15
|
||||
|
||||
|
Re: Ruling on Robonauts Balance
Just to clarify, that field is not on site. It's in Tennessee, and I think it becomes Einstein after the season.
|
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | Rate This Thread |
|
|