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#1
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Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
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While a lottery may be "resource intensive" it solves both issues. There's no running, and everyone has a set amount of seats. Also, to prevent teams from saying they have 50 people just to "be safe" it may be a good idea to have a system in place that the bigger the team is, the less likely they get seats up front. I'm all for simple solutions but at the same time I don't want to half solve the problem. |
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#2
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Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
Am I the only one who just explains that you can't save those seats and continues to sit in them? Not trying to be a jerk but if your 30+ member team is represented by 2 team members and some jackets, then I'm going to still take the seat.
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#3
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Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
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I even followed through on that offer the one time a team member did need the seat before I left. :-) |
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#4
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Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
I think one of the major issues with seating was how little seating in the facility was made available for people--the Championship is held in a huge stadium, and yet what the staff seemed most concerned about was the fact that everyone stayed on the first level of seating. It seemed like 60 percent of the seats in the facility were unused! Maybe the crowd would thin out a bit if teams were allowed to make use of all the available seating, rather than just a small portion!
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#5
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Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
I think FIRST should take a look at how well the scouting section at the GTR Regional (I can't remember which one) that is being held at 610's school. If the whole "Scouting Section" business runs efficiently there, I see no reason why they shouldn't attempt something like it at championships. Especially if they could find a space to set up a full-field view.
This would alleviate the problem in the stands immensely by moving scouts who need priority seating out of the stands and into a scouting section. I think they find four relatively large areas in the convention center to run these sections. Preferably a relatively quiet area. This might also encourage collaboration between teams that are scouting. Another thought: What if they used the high-up seating that is unused above a section to facilitate the scouting section? Would it be difficult to set up a projector there? It also has the benefit of being close to the actual seating and field. The reason I'm so concerned about this is that our scouting operation is intense. We run six scouts, a head scout, a paper filer, and a data entry person. We also collaborate with other teams for our scouting. And anyone who knows FRC knows that scouting wins matches, and good scouting wins regionals. So whatever solution is presented, I want to make sure that scouting is considered as a high priority item. I have no doubt that most of you understand this, but it's something that could easily get thrown under the bridge in the name of organization. |
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#6
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Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
Given the option I don't think there's a single team that would rather watch the match on a screen rather than live when it comes to scouting.
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#7
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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. |
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#8
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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. |
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#9
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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? |
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#10
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Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
Neither. I would show up at 5 AM and get seats.
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#11
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Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
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#12
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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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#13
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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. |
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#14
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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. |
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#15
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Re: FrankAnswersFridays: October 25, 2013: Safety at Championships
And we will still show up at 4:59 am
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