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#406
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Re: Petition to end the shouting of ROBOT
Usually, when we move through the pits with our robot, we say "excuse us, robot coming through," or something similar. Incorporating both politeness and robotness.
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#407
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Re: Petition to end the shouting of ROBOT
At GTCR, people didn't shout it loud enough, and people were being jostled around so much that safety tokens were being taken away if your team didn't yell "ROBOT!" as you transported things. A very angry safety inspector came around to most pits to warn teams.
I have to agree, though. Unless a team is supposed to be on in a minute, this can be done much more quietly while still being safe. |
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#408
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Re: Petition to end the shouting of ROBOT
My TL
R on this because this is truly one dead horse is.As soon as you start valuing the robot more then you value the welfare of those around it then you need to really sit and evaluate the position you are in. Having a robot doesn't mean you can't be polite |
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#409
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Re: Petition to end the shouting of ROBOT
At the Greater DC district, all robot traffic ended up routed through one narrow hallway, and it was often clogged. I can't imagine what we would have done if no one had shouted "Robot!," or at least shouted something in a loud enough voice to alert you that they were trying to pass. If only we all had eyes in the back of our heads...
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#410
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Re: Petition to end the shouting of ROBOT
Quote:
I'm the Senior VC for Indiana. I talked to the Safety Adviser at the Tippy District and told him that we pride ourselves on being polite in Indiana and treating people with respect. We expect our teams to put people before robots, every single time. I asked him that if he hears anyone yelling "Robot" to teach them a more polite and safer approach: having PEOPLE lead the way, tap people on shoulders, saying "excuse me," etc. Our Safety Adviser was very receptive to this. I'll be requesting him back at our Indiana events. Event Coordinators and Volunteer Coordinators absolutely should have similar talks with their Safety Advisers before the event starts. |
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#411
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Re: Petition to end the shouting of ROBOT
Quote:
Quote:
http://archive.usfirst.org/roboticsp...Manual-Release Quote:
Quote:
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#412
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Re: Petition to end the shouting of ROBOT
Quote:
Having a person in front of the robot is wise, but it doesn't make the problem magically go away. |
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#413
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Re: Petition to end the shouting of ROBOT
Quote:
What a lot of this thread takes issue with is the mindless screaming of ROBOT!!!! without concern for what's around the team. Like this: Quote:
The person in front of your cart is responsible for 'parting the waters' in a safe, logical, and polite way. If that means they have to tap some people on the shoulder, then they do it. Robots and people can coexist in the pits, pit aisles, walkways, you name it - as long as people are mindful of how their behavior actually affects others. I posted something last year about how appalling it was for newcomers from my company to be screamed at by teams, so I won't do it again... but this isn't how we keep people from 'outside the tent'. This is another one of those topics, like paper airplanes, where some people think it's okay to be disrespectful just because 'it's the culture we already have'. Just because it's what some people have always done, doesn't mean it's the right thing to do. |
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#414
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Re: Petition to end the shouting of ROBOT
Quote:
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#415
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Re: Petition to end the shouting of ROBOT
Quote:
The title of the thread is "petition to end the shouting of ROBOT." Anything said in a voice loud enough to be heard at many competitions can be fairly considered "shouting," and I don't think there's any argument to be made that using the word "robot" is, per se, an inappropriate way of doing it (if you wish to use other words to supplement it for the sake of manners, that's fine, but I don't think that's such a pressing issue that it deserves its own thread). Of course, "mindless screaming" of anything is neither useful nor appropriate. But a lot of shouts of "Robot!" are most certainly not that, and pointing that out is a perfectly reasonable thing to do given the title of the thread. I won't actually be there, but I hope for the sake of all the teams involved that, if this is the case, there is nothing comparable to the chokepoint of that hallway at Greater DC. |
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#416
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Re: Petition to end the shouting of ROBOT
Quote:
So here's my question: What does "ROBOT!" accomplish that "Pardon me, Robot coming through, Heads up!" at similar volume doesn't? |
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#417
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Re: Petition to end the shouting of ROBOT
Quote:
I openly admit that I don't understand a lot of social ritual, though, so it's entirely possible that I'm way out of the ordinary in not caring. But from my (admittedly biased) sampling of other people at competition, I've never met anyone else who feels otherwise. Last edited by Oblarg : 17-03-2016 at 09:47. |
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#418
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Re: Petition to end the shouting of ROBOT
Quote:
What does "Pardon me, Robot coming through on your left, Heads up!" accomplish that "ROBOT!" at similar volume doesn't? The answer is a lot. |
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#419
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Re: Petition to end the shouting of ROBOT
GPR was generally good about keeping the pits under control. We never really had to scream robot just a polite "excuse us" or people were generally aware of robots approaching them.
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#420
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Re: Petition to end the shouting of ROBOT
Quote:
But it's often the case that a single "Robot!" effectively gets people to look up, notice you, and clear out of the way. I observed this several times at DC, and didn't see anyone gravely harmed or offput by the lack of manners. So I have a hard time seeing the need to not do it. |
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