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#46
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Re: Cheesecake robot. How far is too far?
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#47
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Re: Cheesecake robot. How far is too far?
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#48
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Re: Cheesecake robot. How far is too far?
Not sure why it's still being ignored, but dtengineering already explained why an 100% "cheesecaked" robot is illegal.
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#49
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Re: Cheesecake robot. How far is too far?
Going against such an alliance makes the other competing teams face unfairness. Of course some teams have more resources and it will never change but doesn't it make you lose the fundamental values of FIRST ? Not winning is not the end of the world but knowing you had chances of winning stripped away from you because of some gray areas and irregularities in regulations, that just wrong from my point.
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#50
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Re: Cheesecake robot. How far is too far?
In my opinion if you have to cheesecake a whole new bot into you alliance, it says a whole lot about your strategy. If you are so focused on needing this one exact type of robot that you will completely remove a functional robot from the field, it is a poorly drafted strategy. A major part of FRC strategy is the aspect of adapting to what you have and applying problem solving skills. If you can't find one speck of utility in someone else's design, you find a role for them, or you don't pick them.
Also cheesecake is not an instant win. At one of our regionals we saw one of the top alliances take the entire lift of of a robot so they could replace it with can grabbers, and they ultimately only came in second to an alliance of three bots who worked together. As a student and the drive coach of a mid tier team, I support improving existing systems that teams have build, but oppose adding new ones that are untested or risk removing current robot function |
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#51
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Re: Cheesecake robot. How far is too far?
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#52
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Re: Cheesecake robot. How far is too far?
The rules are pretty clear: you alone can't build a robot for another team, but you can help them build an entirely new robot in the time available with 'raw materials' and COTS parts. Since the rules allow it, it's going to happen. And since the rules allow it for everyone involved, there is nothing 'unfair' about it.
If you don't like something about the rules, go out and lobby the rules committee. But good luck, not even CD can agree on what 'should' be allowed. |
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#53
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Re: Cheesecake robot. How far is too far?
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All I'm saying is, as you have said, if all teams involved are open about their intentions and agree to it, then it's fine -- but if it isn't open and discussed prior to selection, then it's not fine at all. |
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#54
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Re: Cheesecake robot. How far is too far?
Think about it from FIRSTs side. Obviously this is not in the "spirit of FIRST" so as FIRST what are your options to stop people from building their own alliance partners?
1) You could extend withholding weight to include COTS parts. Which hurts everyone. 2) You aren't allowed to bag 2 robots, but what if they bag all the parts to make a robot? Now FIRST has to say "You can only bag your robot and no other parts" 3) A plausible solution could be to include a maximum financial cost on withholding, COTS and bagged parts to ensure that a second robot cannot come in while allowing you to have spares for yourself. All 3 of these solutions would hurt teams as the FIRST metagame stands now. Is it really worth opening that can of worms? |
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#55
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Re: Cheesecake robot. How far is too far?
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"Hi, new partners! We selected you so that we can strip off your upper mechanical and add this stuff that we made!" "No." "...but we'll probably win if we do that!" "No." "...but that's the whole reason why we selected you!" "Then you should have gotten us on-board with that before selecting us." "Sorry, our bad. But you're okay with this so we can win, right?" "No." |
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#56
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Re: Cheesecake robot. How far is too far?
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It's very hard to inspire someone by telling them that you only picked them so that you could cheesecake their robot, and far easier if you talked to them prior to picking them. |
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#57
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Re: Cheesecake robot. How far is too far?
What about the inspiration of the teams not picked? The other alliances? The spectators?
The impact of actions such as this shouldn't be solely evaluated based on the team receiving the "cheesecake." |
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#58
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Re: Cheesecake robot. How far is too far?
Ethics and rules aside...
ain't nobody got time for that. |
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#59
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Re: Cheesecake robot. How far is too far?
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As for the ethical side of this argument, I think it stands that this should be agreed upon BEFORE alliance selections. If this isn't agreed upon with the alliance captain and leadership of the team being selected, then it's the picked team's call as to whether or not they alter their robot. That being said, I don't think it's unreasonable to request this of a team if it's for the better of the alliance. If this is something that could lead to an event win, then I personally think it'd be a bit foolish for a team to refuse to consider the potential gains. It is, however, unacceptable to EXPECT this of a team. Personally, I'd rather have the blue banner with a modified/altered robot and intelligent alliance strategy than go home empty handed because I let pride trump logic. |
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#60
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Re: Cheesecake robot. How far is too far?
Isn't the goal of FIRST to inspire students towards STEM? It's more than just the robot and certainly more than winning. Helping a team add a mechanism without disabling other features of their robot can be beneficial to everyone. However, picking a team to completely rebuild or replace their bot isn't. The situation on Curie with 1114 last year was difficult to watch. I wouldn't have wanted to be on the team being rebuilt. Seeing six weeks of work go down the drain wouldn't have been worth a win for my team. The point should be people putting forward their own work and what they've learned. If winning is worth more than that dedication and work, I wonder if you're doing this for the right reasons. You can help other teams without throwing away everything they've done.
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