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#91
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Re: FRC rules around seating need to change.
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#92
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Re: FRC rules around seating need to change.
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#93
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Re: FRC rules around seating need to change.
We largely do that already. Much of the issue is that scouts actually need breaks and will leave. We've had people than come sit in those empty seats and assert ownership. In addition, certain scouts often have multiple roles at the beginning of the day and putting their butt in a seat isn't the highest priority among those activities.
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#94
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Re: FRC rules around seating need to change.
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#95
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Re: FRC rules around seating need to change.
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I'm pretty sure I'm not alone in this. Blake Last edited by gblake : 06-05-2016 at 19:03. |
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#96
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Re: FRC rules around seating need to change.
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Citrusdad your posts have been increasingly concerning. Off from that subtopic. After some thinking about the whole thing I realized that is was kind of messed up that FIRST did not provide better seats for volunteers during large events at championships. IE Opening Ceremonies, and Einstein/Closing Ceremonies. The volunteer section was up in the nosebleeds. Shouldn't volunteers seating be put at a higher priority then teams? I do not think many teams would object to there being a volunteer section on the lower level near the sections they reserve for teams on Einstein. |
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#97
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Re: FRC rules around seating need to change.
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This next bit isn't directed at you personally: Across several related threads there are multiple reports of people getting "pushed or shoved" over "saved seats." This burns me up. Shoving people while in a theatre/stadium seating setting is not just un-GP, its not just rude, its flat out DANGEROUS! People losing their balance and falling down several steps can very easily lead to a serious head injury and a trip to the hospital! NO! NO! NO!I don't think we need a rule change. I just think we need more awareness. Perhaps next year's game can be named "There's no saving seats!" The endgame can be musical chairs! |
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#98
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Re: FRC rules around seating need to change.
Leave it to CD to let discussion of seat saving blow completely out of proportion. Everyone is just throwing out what they think the rules should be so I'll try and change the discussion for a bit. Is there any particular reason why having reserved seating for scouts is such a bad idea? Please don't answer with anecdotes of how the rules are now such as "come early and your scouts will have good seats". I'm saying if the rules were changed for this, would it be for the better or for worse and why?
Edit: Also only referring to championships with regards to this hypothetical rule change. Last edited by Rangel : 06-05-2016 at 19:37. |
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#99
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Re: FRC rules around seating need to change.
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Teams will get 7 team stickers (The removable kind) which they can stick to any seat they want and designate it as reserved. They would still probably have to arrive early to get the best seats but it would only be a single day of that. If a team has more then 7 scouts they either can forfeit the stickers. Ask for stickers from teams who are not using them or sit without the luxury of being able to save the seats. Some people may argue for more then 7 but here is the reason for the number. 1 person per robot plus a lead scout. If a team has a ton more scouters they can be in a different section and the lead scouter can bounce between the 2 sections to congregate data. Also any more then 7 per team can get out of hand quickly. At an event like worlds 7 per team is 4,200 saved seats and at a typical regional that's 420 seats. The last bit is during elims, and ceremonies the stickers are inactive and people can sit in the seat. |
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#100
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Re: FRC rules around seating need to change.
This is kind of tangential but I was kind of surprised at how many people would walk the aisles, get out of their seats, etc during matches. The etiquette at baseball games is to wait until between at bats. Seems like there is enough time between matches to move around that the sight lines should stay clear during matches.
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#101
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Re: FRC rules around seating need to change.
I don't know if other regionals do this, but Lone Star has "spectator" seating. Essentially, if your team is on the field right now, you are allowed to sit there, and get up as soon as the match is done. At lone star at least, I believe that most people respect these rules, and it works out fine. I personally also like the idea of seating for scouters. A possible system might entitle: when you check in on thursday (or maybe earlier) you need to declare how many scouting seats your team needs, max of 6. Use some sort of randomizing thing, and assign seats for scouters randomly (teams are together ofcourse). Then tape reserved signs on those seats (with the assigned team number) so that there will be no fighting within that area. After that, its up to the non scouters in the team to find their own seats.
If we want to push this idea further, make some "scouting team" buttons (like drive team buttons" and you can only sit in the scouting seat if you have the right team badge...... Before people say scouting buttons are stupid (I don't actually know if people will say that ) just remember, scouting is just as important as the drive team. |
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#102
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Re: FRC rules around seating need to change.
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I feel the need to clarify what we do as a team in the stands to "save seats". Almost all of our team except the pit crew arrives at the venue an hour or more early so they are some of the first people in the door. When they get in they find a good spot in the stands and fill into a block of seats leaving a few scattered seats open, usually in the middle of whatever rows we are occupying as well as a few on the end of the row(s). Most people generally feel weird about sitting down in the middle of a group of people but are fine sitting on the end for a while to watch some matches. If someone wants to sit down with us we won't tell them no unless whoever was sitting there will be right back, most people are fine with that. This gives us at least some ability to sit as a group with a few of us coming and going periodically while not being rude about it. For lunch we will cycle the group out about half or a third at a time to keep the block of seats mostly occupied in order to discourage people from taking over the seats and protect the tablets and computers we use for scouting. While it may not overtly be saving seats, it is technically saving seats. So far herd mentality has been the best approach that we have come up with. |
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#103
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Re: FRC rules around seating need to change.
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This whole thread has gone off in about a hundred different directions, so here's my opinions on the topics laid out a little more definitively:
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#104
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Re: FRC rules around seating need to change.
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You might not word it that way, but that's the net of it. Please don't be the person who tells anyone right now that any group of ordinary spectators needs to have a few people rush in to claim and save seats so that the total group all sit in good seats when they arrive later. Why? Because when you do that you are telling everyone else, including me, that their/my place is in the bad seats that aren't acceptable to you. Who made the people in the rule-breaking group the special people who don't have to sit in those seats that aren't good enough for them, but are apparently good enough for the unwashed masses (the rest of us)? That is the perception seat-saving creates in many, many, many people. Chinmay said it well in his earlier post. That's the sort of thing that makes our beloved Jar-Jar Binks exclaim, "How rude!". I agree that waking up at ridiculous hours to stand in queues is silly. I'm confident that most folks would endorse an improved method that made sense. FIRST could allocate seating by flipping a lot of coins, by drawing names from a fish bowl, by playing rock-paper-scissors, or by whatever other process might make sense. In the future, however FIRST wants to allow the process to unfold is the process I'll follow; but right now the process is, "Don't save seats." Blake PS: If 2, 3, 5, 10, ... teams at an event habitually form a large group (a mafia? ) of seat-savers who manage to more or less equitably carve up the best/better seats at an event(s) year after year, or at multiple locations in one year; they shouldn't wear out their arms out patting themselves on the back for being gracious to one another. At a 48 team event, those cooperative savers just told the other 46, 45, 43, 38, ... teams at the event(s) that those other teams belong in seats the savers are unwilling to sit in. They basically told all those other teams to suck it. Again, that is the perception large-scale seat-saving creates in many, many, many people. Last edited by gblake : 06-05-2016 at 22:59. |
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#105
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Re: FRC rules around seating need to change.
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