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#136
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Re: 2015 Lessons Learned: The Negative
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At the same time, a bad match in Recycle Rush is pretty devastating. The X-Cats had a match at Finger Lakes where to get the average up our alliance would have needed a 300+ game while the other alliance needed to score, say, 50 points. Both scenarios were possible but not very likely. Last edited by GaryVoshol : 04-28-2015 at 05:13 PM. Reason: fixed quote formatting |
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#137
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Re: 2015 Lessons Learned: The Negative
I worked as a safety glasses attendant and had to deal with problems on Wednesday and Thursday.
On Wednesday before 5pm, pit access was supposed to be limited to 5 team members. There was no way to enforce this so most teams came through with everybody. This was a safety problem due to the large amounts of equipment being moved into the pits. Some monitors tried to enforce the 5 person rule which only annoyed people and slowed down the lines. So for next year, if this rule/procedure is really important, FIRST needs to get buttons, ribbons, etc, to the load-in crew so convention center staff and FIRST volunteers can help enforce it. I do not care one way or another as I believe the fear of a person being impaled by trusswork or of actually doing the impaling will make people move thoughtfully. On Thursday, one of the divisions was running late and we were told to shut down pits at 5pm on the nose. Ushers were there to do this and several teams who had legitimate business in the pits were denied. Some adults got nasty with the ushers who then called security. The issue was resolved when a paid FIRST staff member gave the necessary instructions to let people in. On other notes: - Men's bathrooms were gross after about 12noon. Leaky toilets, broken soap dispensers, and empty towel rolls ruled the day. - Convention Center concessions were expensive. If I respect the operator's no outside food rule, then I expect not to have to pay $10 for a hamburger. Meeting people was great and some the scenes of teams walking around will stay with me for a long time. After all, where else but an FRC even will you see a pig identify someone they know, give a hug, and then pose for a selfie? Eric |
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#138
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Re: 2015 Lessons Learned: The Negative
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Sorry, I am always going to defend someone who has the guts to go in front of people live, it's something most of us couldn't do. |
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#139
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Re: 2015 Lessons Learned: The Negative
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*Worst ever was speaking as high school valedictorian at our ring ceremony. Towards the end I his a paragraph break and paused and I swear everyone held their breath hoping I was done. And then I kept going. I hope to never lose an audience that thoroughly again. |
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#140
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Re: 2015 Lessons Learned: The Negative
My only unique negative this season stemmed from the ability to make a robot taller than our trailer and taller than our crates. It causes us many hours of headache to have to separate the vertical towers in such a way that they would work smoothly with the lift when reassembled. Then there's the whole issue about short people being unable to work on the upper part of the robot. Cap the starting height at 60" so we won't have the temptation to put ourselves through that again
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Agree, 100% and more about the webcasts. Apparently each event has an A/V company who's in charge, and while my non-profit was willing to fork over a few $hundred for a high-res live h264 encoder, the DC Regional venue's A/V team refused to give us anything but the typical RCA output (even though HDMI was available...). |
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#141
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Re: 2015 Lessons Learned: The Negative
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The organizational expenses on FRC is ~$36 million for 2014, and it is difficult to make it loud when we can't tell Grandma to tune in easily (but at least she can go to one of two championships if she makes it!). I'm really hoping we can get more transparency into the financials so we can get a good estimate on what the organization spent on the concerts/FIRST Finale at CMP. I think most of the organization would rather have a substantially better webcast and production over those add on experiences. Last edited by Conor Ryan : 04-28-2015 at 11:24 AM. |
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#142
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Re: 2015 Lessons Learned: The Negative
I'd like to see it go back to winning instead of average score, and I'd like to see defense return. We had so much fun playing a defensive robot the year before, but we were kind of disappointed that defensive play was gone in Recycle Rush. When defense is an option it serves to even the playing field a bit, because the big high scoring juggernaut teams can still be taken down by a really good defensive performance. I also think that the way autonomous was scored this year wasn't very fun either. We got our can in the auto zone 90% of the time, but we only got auto points for it twice because other teams just sat there and everyone had to get inside the auto zone for any points to count.
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#143
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Re: 2015 Lessons Learned: The Negative
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I think all of the FIRST planning committees need to recognize HD webcasts are the bare minimum for every event. Having teams provide the webcasts is only an ad-hoc fix since they may not be able to cover every event or become unable to provide coverage in future years. The rest of the world needs to follows Michigan's footsteps. |
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#144
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Re: 2015 Lessons Learned: The Negative
I'm going to be pretty blunt here:
My personal opinion is that Show Ready is out of touch with what creates an efficient production for FIRST. All Show Ready, A/V, or any production staff should always be physically paired with a knowledgeable FIRST person. |
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#145
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Re: 2015 Lessons Learned: The Negative
I'd be cautious to make this claim without knowing how much of the decision making process is HQ/Planning Committee and how much is SRE.
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#146
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Re: 2015 Lessons Learned: The Negative
I understand that in real-life engineering, mistakes can be fatal - catastrophic even. I understand that FRC is made to mimic real-life engineering - too tough a task, not enough time to do it, not enough money to fund it - the things Dr. Flowers says every year.
I also understand that FRC is at least partially a high school event. I liked using the Qualification Average as a way to rank the teams - it seemed much more effective than the traditional WLT method. And good teams with bad matches could still perform in eliminations through alliance selections. But the challenge of overcoming a bad match in eliminations was, in many ways, impossibly hard. If a team got a DQ - even if it was due to miscommunication with event staff - it was a death sentence for the entire alliance. |
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#147
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Re: 2015 Lessons Learned: The Negative
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Regardless, I stand by my statement that all Show Ready, A/V, or production crew need to be paired with a knowledgeable robotics person. Many district events and state championship events are managed more efficiently and have better production value than some Show Ready managed robotics events. (FiM State Championship, for example...) Why is this? |
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#148
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Re: 2015 Lessons Learned: The Negative
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#149
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Re: 2015 Lessons Learned: The Negative
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Now that they know what they are up against I suspect they will do a much better job next year. |
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#150
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Re: 2015 Lessons Learned: The Negative
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