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#16
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Re: Fun Wild Idea: Corporate Sponsors Build & Compete!
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http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=XVczPBZ5oxU |
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#17
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Re: Fun Wild Idea: Corporate Sponsors Build & Compete!
I propose calling this outlandish idea the "FIRST Robotics Competition".
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#18
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Re: Fun Wild Idea: Corporate Sponsors Build & Compete!
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#19
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Re: Fun Wild Idea: Corporate Sponsors Build & Compete!
I see what you did there....
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#20
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How about myth busters mentoring a few companies build teams? Say Orange County choppers vs Paul jr designs vs Jesse James.
None of them have robot experience, but all have fabrication experience. Would be fun to see them out of their comfort zones. Plus they all have discovery channel ties so could be a great boost to first with the tv coverage. The unveil could be at champs. |
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#21
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Re: Fun Wild Idea: Corporate Sponsors Build & Compete!
I think I this is a great idea! I heard that a long time ago Dean Kamen invited a bunch of sponsors to do something like this. At one point, they ended up betting on each other, with all the money going to FIRST
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#22
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Re: Fun Wild Idea: Corporate Sponsors Build & Compete!
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If you go back and watch footage from early years, you'll notice they don't call teams by their name, or their number, but by their sponsor. Many teams had a single corporate sponsor paired with a high school, so you would literally see GM versus Motorola in the finals. FRC enticed corporations and engineers by presenting a cool challenge with publicity and name recognition for the winner - plus working with high schoolers who can be inspired by how cool everything is and for most teams take a hands-on role in a real engineering challenge. Somewhere along the line, FIRST's desire for growth led to the creation of more teams that start at the high school level and find sponsors, rather than starting at the sponsor level and finding high schools. The educational aspects of the competition saw more emphasis, COTS lowered the barrier to entry in terms of engineering resources, and FIRST actively aimed put itself in every high school in the US. Again, I wasn't there (I was *born* in the first year of FRC), but this is how it's been described to me. I feel like an understanding of FRC's roots helps explain the corporate-school partnership a bit better and can put to rest fears or complaints about "sponsor built robots" - indeed, that was the point at one time. |
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#23
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Re: Fun Wild Idea: Corporate Sponsors Build & Compete!
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Though I do think it would be cool to see just the professionals on their own team, and see how they compare to the FRC student side teams! |
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#24
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Re: Fun Wild Idea: Corporate Sponsors Build & Compete!
Same budget as HS teams (may be hard to regulate ) but than the top 3 corporate could face off with the top 3 HS teams.
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#25
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Re: Fun Wild Idea: Corporate Sponsors Build & Compete!
This is a great Idea.
The Idea of an arbitrary limit dosn't make sense to me. You should have all existing sponsors who want to participate place bids on how much they are willing to spend on the project. They must match this amount in a donation to FIRST for the entry fee. The 6th highest bid becomes the limit and fee for all 6 teams. (placing budget limit deprives teams of seeing actual professional robots built for competition. The more sponsors are willing to spend, the more publicity gained, plus shipping costs are going to almost double production cost with tight timeline) The first, and most important restriction would be the time given to build. This could be anywhere between 3 days (robot in 3 days) or two weeks. I don't think people who are employed full time to build a robot would need any more than that. The second major restriction would be build team size. I would say put some limit on the number of former and or active mentors per team. Also maybe limit number of people who can participate two years in a row. Lastly, the the randomly selected alliance that wins in Einstein will get priority to compete following year. |
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#26
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Re: Fun Wild Idea: Corporate Sponsors Build & Compete!
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Let me make one thing clear: Without the sponsors, many teams would not exist. By having the sponsors as part of the team's official name, FIRST is choosing to recognize the sponsors' involvement and partnership with the teams to help inspire the next generation of engineers, teachers, technicians, and other future leaders. Specifically, the partnership. This isn't something to be taken lightly--these companies have made an investment in the future--and specifically, their future. |
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#27
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Re: Fun Wild Idea: Corporate Sponsors Build & Compete!
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#28
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Re: Fun Wild Idea: Corporate Sponsors Build & Compete!
They have a science consultant who is a physics professor at UCLA, and actress Mayim Bialik (plays Amy) has her PhD in neuroscience. They're smart people, they may not be engineers, but I'm sure they could build a working robot, even if it isn't Einstein level.
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#29
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Re: Fun Wild Idea: Corporate Sponsors Build & Compete!
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#30
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Re: Fun Wild Idea: Corporate Sponsors Build & Compete!
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