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| View Poll Results: Will you use paper/whiteboard, a palm-pilot, or something else? | |||
| Paper/whiteboard |
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15 | 19.23% |
| Palm-pilot/laptop |
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25 | 32.05% |
| Don't know. |
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38 | 48.72% |
| Voters: 78. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#31
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Re: POLL: Will you be using a scoring aid?
I am very interested to see what designs for paper or whiteboard there will be. I think the flat box can be confusing because it does not show the wrap around nor does it show quickly which number is on which side of the field. I would imagine a staggered box pattern to make it look more 3d. If anyone has designed out their designs they'll be using as coaches, please upload them.
And for those making programs for palms... I have a PalmOne Zire 3.1. I think this program would be cool to have even if not used as a coach. I do not know if I will be a coach this year, I'll be happy to hand the duty over if the students choose to have a student take the position this year. I believe I would mostly go with intuition as opposed to number crunching. Where else would you place a spoiler than on a large row or at the intersection two rows that form a T or cross. That being said, I do not even plan on using spoilers. |
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#32
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Re: POLL: Will you be using a scoring aid?
I don't know if I will be a on-field coach this year, but if I am I will not be using any scoreing aid.
The reason is because I don't believe the coach needs one, nor do I believe it's the coaches job to be a scorekeeper. I believe that the coach should be assessing the capabilities of the robots on the field (both allied and opposing) as well as assessing the strategy being used by the opponents. There will be a myrid of strategies used in this game (and in this thread I have not seen my teams strategy ), and each will have to be assessed quickly and play modified to adapt to those strategies. That is the job of the coach, IMHO. |
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#33
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Re: POLL: Will you be using a scoring aid?
Quote:
And no, I don't anticipate anybody on 1618 using a scoring aid for the simple reason that good data is hard to collect, especially in a fast-paced match. |
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#34
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Re: POLL: Will you be using a scoring aid?
I think that taking the time to imput in all the tubes take too long. Simply going with intuition you should be able to make sound judgements. I would still want to test a scoring aid, but I don't think that I want to take the time away from watching our robot, our alliance, the opposing 3 robots, the rack, the locations of spoilers and ringers on the ground, the remaining time...
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#35
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Re: POLL: Will you be using a scoring aid?
Your coach just needs to have an idea to what you want to do before the match, if you take time to actually write/type/mark anything, you will have to take your eyes off the field and thats time wasted that you could be scoring. Ken always tells us that its the coaches job to know what should happen next because hes the drivers/operators "eyes" for the rest of the field (He likes to tell us what to do
). If you can find a quick way of doing it then more power to you, but i think you should just practice all the different ways of scoring and whats needed in each situation. |
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#36
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Re: POLL: Will you be using a scoring aid?
As arguments against using a scoring aid go, I'm fully comfortable with the "coaches should be watching the whole field and not spending time punching figures into a program" line of reasoning. I know a number of excellent coaches who all subscribe to this philosophy, and it makes the most sense to me, for what that's worth.
What I'm not comfortable with is when we start to speak categorically. My feeling is that over the course of the season, a good coach watching the entire situation in every match will win more matches than a good coach tabulating score and making decisions based on that in every match. Following from this, I think that the best coach is a composite, provided perfect information prior to each match on which coaching method is going to end up being optimal. The assumption I make in this assessment is, of course, that there ARE matches where a loss can be turned into a win by switching from pure field watching to a watching/tabulating combination, so I suppose I have to support that. Where I think knowing the exact score and optimal next move is important is in the last 20 or 30 seconds of the match, when alliances are going to start to think about their call backs for end-of-match elevation. Implicit in this strategic consideration is an issue with the placement and timing of your last ringer/spoiler. I doubt that even a very good coach can consistently know the exact score well enough to determine the risk/reward tradeoffs with regard to time remaining. For example: do we need to leave our best hanger out in the middle of the field for 5 seconds longer than the safest call back time, given the endgame capabilities of our alliance and our opponents and the score? What is the downside risk associated with this decision? Is there a less risky way to assure victory in the match (e.g. do we need to get a spoiler on the side, or just another ringer right in front of us before getting back)? There is no reason why a very good coach without an aid can not make a winning decision in these types of situations every time they come up over the season, given the limited number of matches. I highly doubt that this coach can perform on the fly the calculations necessary to come to an optimal solution as many times out of 100 as can a computer program with the right degree of sophistication. This theoretically reduces the aid-less coach's winning percentage over the long run. On the other side of the coin, I think we can all agree that there are match situations where looking down at a screen can cause a coach to miss things vital to success, so I'm not going to spend any time on that. Another thing to consider is that one of my assumptions is a "good" coach. As the quality of a coach diminishes, I think we eventually reach a point where that person would be better off using a program to determine the next best move to tell the drivers while completely ignoring ''big picture'' situation. My gut feeling is that if we could graph it out, that point would come much earlier along the coach quality decline curve than we would think. To use an example from this thread, Karthik: I know you're confident that your coach will be able to consitently make the best or at least a satisficing decision to win. I wonder: without Derek (assuming you can't fill in), how confident would you feel? (Forgive me a small digression, but sometimes I wish that coaches would switch teams more often so that we could more accurately determine the impact of above or below average coaching on bottom line win totals. I'm thinking about baseball, where many analysts have determined that a "good" manager probably adds around 3 to 6 wins per year by strategy alone - not counting player development and management - which seems like an awfully low number when we consider the popular image of the manager as genius. In football it seems like the right head coach can turn a team around completely, and I suspect that this is true, because football, being an emotional game, requires more ''inspiration'' from the coach, and because there are so many more strategic options than in baseball. I suspect that coaching in FIRST would fall somewhere between those two sports, but evaluation suffers from the same pitfalls as in sports, in which coaches and managers with good players look good, and the ones with bad players look like idiots. This pitfall is clear when we think about the best, big name coaches in FIRST: they're all from teams who build great robots.) All this being said, my conclusion is the same as many others, that a good coach is likely better served by watching the field than by spending any time inputting data, with the qualifier that a mediocre coach might want to investigate his or her computer based options. As for me (scouting and strategy from the stands), I would consider tracking these real time statistics so that I can evaluate our match strategy and report it to the drivers and coach afterwards, but I'm reasonably certain that I won't be using one either. After all, you can probably tell I'm into objectivity, but if we can't rely on experience and the human mind from time to time, then we're in trouble, aren't we? |
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#37
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Re: POLL: Will you be using a scoring aid?
Hey, we've got 3 coaches out there, right? And 3 human players with not that all much to do this year. How long does it take to scoop up a tube and push it through the chute, or toss it over the wall?
So, one of the coaches could run the laptop/palm. The HP from that team would take over the coaching of that robot. All 3 coaches (other two from the alliance and the upgraded HP) would take suggestions from the coach with the device. "We need a stopper on 7 Bottom." "Try to score 3 Top." "The only way we can win now is if we get 60 bonus points." Let's make these real alliances - choose one of the coaches to do something a bit differently this year. What this means is, if you're developing a coach scoring aid, you also need to develop a HP/coach student. |
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