everyday847 wrote:after I was asleep

everyday847 wrote:after I was asleep
Damn, that was one of my favorite tossups. I will echo the opinion that it's important and that it's shown up multiple times as a clue or a bonus answer before, so I don't think it's unreasonable here.The Zanj Revolt
I admit it was frustrating at times when I buzzed with science answers only to find that you were asking about a more specific instance ie. a more specific form of the Ising model and a more specific form of gravitational lensing, but this is definitely a result of a lack of knowledge on my part so that's okay. I continue to be annoyed by tossups on chromatography however. It's a pain trying to divine what specific type of chromatography the question is asking for and this has twice result in my negging the question. Overall I enjoyed the science Dwight. Some really exciting stuff came up and the bio and chem for the most part seemed to be on topics that were important and meaningful. I was a little confused by the protein degradation question though.cvdwightw wrote:Okay, Hannah, if you or anyone else can provide me with a better description of what the kinetic isotope effect is used for, I'd (non-sarcastically) love to hear it. I'll admit it may have been non-unique, but I don't think it was "space-wasting." Also, Eric (Mukherjee) pointed out a non-unique clue I added to the CD antigens question, so I want to apologize to anyone who may have negged with "lectins" off the "mannose-6-phosphate receptor" clue.
If anyone had any other issues with the bio and chem, please let me know. I did my best to ensure that the tossups were neither too long (when the packets are released, you will notice that the science questions are almost all 8 +/- 1 lines, whereas many others spill into 10+ lines) nor too hard, though that ultimately may not have been the case. Personally, I will disregard Dees' difficulty concerns as not applying to my categories since I believe he is equally likely to miss science tossups and zero science bonuses at both the nationals difficulty and "regular difficulty" levels; I will certainly take difficulty concerns about science more seriously from people who don't consistently complain all the way through science bonuses.
Not to beat the dead horse, but I agree that there should have been an "ACF Nationals Logistics Director" who was completely unaffiliated in any way with the editing of the tournament.
Since ample resources are available, I figured someone would have posted database search results, but I didn't see any.DumbJaques wrote:Damn, that was one of my favorite tossups. I will echo the opinion that it's important and that it's shown up multiple times as a clue or a bonus answer before, so I don't think it's unreasonable here.The Zanj Revolt
Man, particularly after there had already been some content that seemed to have been influenced by HI's crazy, I was so excited to get a tossup on lectins because of my tossup on lectins. Oh, well. It's all good.cvdwightw wrote:Okay, Hannah, if you or anyone else can provide me with a better description of what the kinetic isotope effect is used for, I'd (non-sarcastically) love to hear it. I'll admit it may have been non-unique, but I don't think it was "space-wasting." Also, Eric (Mukherjee) pointed out a non-unique clue I added to the CD antigens question, so I want to apologize to anyone who may have negged with "lectins" off the "mannose-6-phosphate receptor" clue.
I was so seriously elated to see this come up. I learned about it in middle school world history, but have never seen it anywhere.Brian Ulrich wrote:Kingdom of Kongo
This might have broader applicability for discussions of world history and literature in quiz bowl more generally. From the mid-1990's on, there was a push away from "Western Civ" and into "World X." (At least that's when it happened in college, but secondary school curriculums are probably similar since this was based off societal trends.) The quiz bowl canon, however, was produced by people who were deciding it was important at the same time, but without the academic background for what I suspect would become a fairly comparable curriculum across textbooks. For this reason, in many areas, the two simply don't match. I'd guess Prince Shotoku, Sejong the Great, and 'Ezana would fall into a similar netherworld.JelloBiafra wrote:I was so seriously elated to see this come up. I learned about it in middle school world history, but have never seen it anywhere.Brian Ulrich wrote:Kingdom of Kongo
I am often of two minds on this; I think it certainly can, if that edge-scratching is done in a consistent and measured way. Specifically, those whose expertise are in specific subject areas guide that kind of activity based on their own non-quizbowl knowledge. Also, from a pragmatic standpoint; it arguably becomes easier (especially in the waning and frantic days before any tournament) to write a pyramidal, consistent tossup as the answer's distance from the center of the canon increases. It is a lot of work to write a Nationals-level tossup on Charles Dickens than say, "The Mudfog Papers."Bentley Like Beckham wrote:But does scratching the edges of the canon really do this more effectively than, say, Regionals level difficulty with longer tossups to encompass more clues?
While such tournaments might exist; there is certainly a romantic notion of a difficult ACF Nationals that appeals to me and others. I think the real problem is not the existence of a pernicious and dismissive exculpation for Nationals that "questions got hard, people should know more," but the subsequent trickle-down effect that inevitably results wherein some of these questions start to appear in "regular" difficulty tournaments. For some answers/clues, their presence, regardless of the context, i.e. the 3rd bonus part in Editor's Final #2, is apparently all the license some need (I have been a member of that "some") to convert them to tossups. Instead, there tends to be a kind of sanguine Westbrookian "that has come up" reaction associated with this. I am not saying this is pervasive, or something that perhaps a Nationals' author should be necessarily concerned with, but it does exist as a phenomenon that is worth noting, and maybe doing something about. But, I don't know if it is worth sacrificing the unique challenges and opportunities that a "hard" ACF Nationals brings. Conversely, this trickle-down effect is not exclusively to be avoided, in fact, it provides a valuable "canon-bridging" role between the novice, regular, national levels.Bentley Like Beckham wrote:I guess the overall point of my post is that I think there might be room for some sort of national championship on questions of an easier difficulty level. The majority of tournaments held throughout the year are at this level, and I think they do a pretty fine job of assessing who the best team in the tournament is.
dtaylor4 wrote:A search of QBDB and ACFDB gets two hits: 08 Fall (Brown), and T-Party, and was a lead-in both times for tossups on the Abbasid caliphate. A google search also gets a hit for 08 Sun 'n' Fun (not sure of question) and 08 FICHTE (bonus in R8.)
Sun 'n' Fun wrote: [AR]Answer the following about bloodshed in Iraq…in the 9th century, for 10 points each:
[10]This set of rebellions lasting from 868-883 AD led by Ali Mohammed who led the eponymous group of East African slaves that were set to work in the salt pans of the Shatt Al-Arab.
ANSWER: Zanj Rebellions
[10]The Zanj Rebellions occurred during the rule of this Islamic Dynasty, with capital at Harran and Baghdad, they overthrew the Umayyad and ruled until Hugalu Khan sacked Baghdad in 1258.
ANSWER: Abbasid Dynasty
[10]According The Golden Meadow, a text by the historian Masudi, Ali Mohammed and his Zanjian ex-slaves killed 300,000 people in this city, it is currently Iraq's third largest city and was the cite of a major US offensive against Muqtada al-Sadr forces that occurred in here in March 2008.
ANSWER: Basra
Take THAT, Dukhobors!!!Xfact115 wrote: In contrast, the number of Doukhobors that exist currently is estimated, after a quick Google search, at around twenty thousand.
What?Whig's Boson wrote:Take THAT, Dukhobors!!!Xfact115 wrote: In contrast, the number of Doukhobors that exist currently is estimated, after a quick Google search, at around twenty thousand.
What Bruce means, Robert, is that you just told the Doukhobors who their daddy is and what their daddy does.Xfact115 wrote:What?Whig's Boson wrote:Take THAT, Dukhobors!!!Xfact115 wrote: In contrast, the number of Doukhobors that exist currently is estimated, after a quick Google search, at around twenty thousand.
I don't dispute that African history comes up. I was speculating on gaps between canon knowledge of certain fields of history and the types of history people learn in the course of their education.No Rules Westbrook wrote:Also, Brian, African history comes up plenty in ACF and mACF, even if Kongo has been underrepresented. Sorry if I seem like I'm just telling people "go read packets and you'll have more well-formed opinions about these things!" but...yeah, that's pretty much what I'm saying, again and always.
One round after you played slapbowl in that room, we figured out (following a suggestion from Selene) that the room did have working electricity, but only in a set of outlets in the desk with the computer the moderator was reading from--none of the wall outlets seemed to be working. Setting up buzzers and checking that they actually have power (and then searching for a good outlet if the first one doesn't work) seems like the sort of thing that tournament staff can (and should) be asked to do before the start of the tournament. Heck, with the delays of Saturday morning, random players could have been drafted to help with this if staffers were unavailable.everyday847 wrote:(My perception is probably heightened because while we were told to start at 10:30 like everyone else, we were delayed further since our room had no working buzzers. The set was replaced, the new set did not work. Then we concluded that the room DID NOT HAVE WORKING ELECTRICITY and played slapbowl. Slapbowl! At a reputable tournament!)
Mike, in your first paragraph, when you refer to "Regionals level difficulty" do you mean the recent (2008 and 2009) "regular difficulty" installations of Regionals, or the older (and harder) sets? I think Nationals should have some questions that go to (or beyond) the edges of the canon, and I would say that the recent Regionals are not consistent with that. The older Regionals sets were wackier and had some crazy stuff thrown together with more canonical stuff; I think that's a fine model for Nationals, with the proviso that the integration of the harder and the easier stuff would need to be smoother/more consistent than it was in some of those old Regionals sets. I think Nationals isn't about ranking top teams/players by their mastery of the canon: at Nationals level, I think there's room for some questions that give a chance for people to show what they know outside of what's come up a lot in recent quizbowl tournaments. There's certainly a balance to be struck, but I don't think this Nationals set went too far in the direction of harder, rarer (or completely new) answers. I think the set also would have been fine if it had shifted a bit towards more canonical answers, but I wouldn't want to see as big a shift as I think it would take to provide meaningful games all the way down to the bottom bracket.Bentley Like Beckham wrote:I agree with Charlie that the difficulty of the question is something that should be considered in the scope of the non-top bracket teams at the tournament. Clearly the primary goal of the tournament should be to award the best team in the nation the national title. But does scratching the edges of the canon really do this more effectively than, say, Regionals level difficulty with longer tossups to encompass more clues? As the tournament naturally gets harder in absolute terms as the canon and circuit advances (for instance, lots of people on the chat have agreed that this tournament was harder in absolute terms than the notorious ACF Nationals 2005), I fear the tournament is perhaps leaving a large number of players behind. Certainly there are examples of individuals and teams who have adapted successfully to this--look at Ike Jose's incredible performance, for instance. However, I look at something like the circuit in the Northwest and wonder "how long will it take for these teams to get to a level where they would enjoy and get meaningful games* out of playing ACF Nationals or DI ICT?" Compared to the prospects of "how long will it take for these teams to get to a level where they would enjoy and get meaninful games out of playing ACF Regionals or DI SCT", I feel the answer is much greater.
I guess the overall point of my post is that I think there might be room for some sort of national championship on questions of an easier difficulty level. The majority of tournaments held throughout the year are at this level, and I think they do a pretty fine job of assessing who the best team in the tournament is. I don't necessarily buy the argument that in every case harder questions result in the "best" team winning. Is someone's in-depth knowledge of the most famous work of an author less legitimate than someone elses' shallow knowledge of the second most famous work of an author?
Also, to be clear, this isn't just an ACF problem. The DI ICT also is at a comparatively high difficulty level, somewhat offset by the availability of the DII ICT (which itself may not be at the ideal difficulty for the field). I also don't really want to advocate the abolition of this type of national tournament. I think there's room (although maybe not on the current schedule and budgets) for something like a "hard nationals" and a "less-hard nationals". The goal of the "less-hard nationals" would be to still crown a national champion who is the best on these levels of questions, while still placing the tournament at a difficulty level less intimidating for the bottom 2/3 of the field. While I guess I can see the argument that these teams don't belong at nationals, I also, for quizbowl's sake, would like to see the size of the ACF Nationals field expand from the mid-20's range it's been stuck at for the past few years.
*Meaningful games I would define based on factors like "what percentage of the questions do teams have a chance to answer"? The middle bracket, consisting of teams that are almost all top bracket teams in their regions, averaged missing more than 5 tossups per round and a bonus conversion of around 10 PPB. When you filter that down some more to account for teams that are more along the lines of middle of the pack in their respective regions, those games become even more dismal and prone to the luck of the draw factors that Charlies described.
Could someone post this? I've seen four different versions 1948 Olivier, 1991 Gibson, 1996 Branagh, and 2000 Hawke), and would have loved to play on this tossup.Kenshiro wrote:the tossup on the film versions of Hamlet, although the latter felt oversaturated to me.
I just wanted to note that while it might be easier to write a Nationals-level tossup on "The Mudfog Papers" than it is to write one on Charles Dickens looking only at criteria like "don't give away the answer too early" or "don't write a tossup on something hackneyed," I really think it is actually much, much harder (perhaps even impossible) to write a good (or at least serviceable) Nationals-level tossup on "The Mudfog Papers" than it is to write one on Charles Dickens, for the simple reason that "The Mudfog Papers" doesn't seem like it fits the bill for a tossup that will provide for good competition. In fact it seems like a really bad idea for a tossup.SnookerUSF wrote:I am often of two minds on this; I think it certainly can, if that edge-scratching is done in a consistent and measured way. Specifically, those whose expertise are in specific subject areas guide that kind of activity based on their own non-quizbowl knowledge. Also, from a pragmatic standpoint; it arguably becomes easier (especially in the waning and frantic days before any tournament) to write a pyramidal, consistent tossup as the answer's distance from the center of the canon increases. It is a lot of work to write a Nationals-level tossup on Charles Dickens than say, "The Mudfog Papers."Bentley Like Beckham wrote:But does scratching the edges of the canon really do this more effectively than, say, Regionals level difficulty with longer tossups to encompass more clues?
It is customary to assign buzzers to rooms and set up and test them as soon as buzzers are given to the tournament staff, as has been done at WashU since when I was still at school. This was not done, and buzzers were distributed to moderators at the moderator meeting after teams had been sent to their rooms for round one. I do not know the reason why this was done.setht wrote:One round after you played slapbowl in that room, we figured out (following a suggestion from Selene) that the room did have working electricity, but only in a set of outlets in the desk with the computer the moderator was reading from--none of the wall outlets seemed to be working. Setting up buzzers and checking that they actually have power (and then searching for a good outlet if the first one doesn't work) seems like the sort of thing that tournament staff can (and should) be asked to do before the start of the tournament. Heck, with the delays of Saturday morning, random players could have been drafted to help with this if staffers were unavailable.
Just to clear up any possible confusion - this was refers to the situation on Sunday.dtaylor4 wrote:During the buzzer fiasco, Matt asked me to hold everyone up and to get working buzzers to the top games. After sending three buzzers over there, I tried to call Matt to ask whether he wanted me to start Round 2 or not. After being unable to reach him by phone, I made the call to hold everyone up until all the Round 1 games were completed. I felt that this was the right call, and do not regret it. What I do regret is not getting the word to the teams sooner, and for that I apologize.
I disagree with everything you've said here. There's nothing wrong with writing a tossup on the Abbasids at Nationals, just as there was nothing wrong with people's decisions to write tossups on Porfirio Diaz or George Washington. I can't really speak to whether the Zanj revolt was a good idea for a tossup at ACF Nationals; my impression is that it was fine. Anyway, I really don't see how saying that an easier, related answer choice would have been fine (and perhaps even better) indicates any sort of cultural basis.Xfact115 wrote:I also find the assertion that a tossup on the Abbasids with the Zanj revolt as a clue at this level to be nothing less than offensive. That's what happened at Fall this year and that's where tossups on things like the Abbasid Caliphate belong. The Abbasid Caliphate, which only ruled over the golden age of Arabic civilization for 500 years, is far too easy to be asked about at Nationals. I understand that Quiz Bowl takes place in North America but this kind of cultural bias is inexcusable.
Kyle (I'm assuming questions are cleared for discussion, since they're being discussed):Kyle wrote:Regarding the Zanj revolt itself, I am trying to imagine a tossup on it. In my mind, there are six lines of obscure things that nobody could possibly be expected to buzz on followed by an allusion to the fact that they are black and then a mention of the Abbasid caliphate. No?
UCLA/South Carolina Packet wrote: This event was centered in the city of al-Mukhtare, and many of the people involved in this event had been imported for the back-breaking work of clearing out the marshes in the Tigris River basin. The leader of this movement adopted the position of the Kharajites in saying that leadership should be based on abilities and not on heredity, but only after his own claims of descent had been disproved. It allowed the existence of an independent Egypt for its length and originated around the salt mines in the city of Basra, which was besieged for fifteen years by this movement. Its leader claimed descent from Caliph Ali ibn Abu Talib; that leader, Ali ibn Muhammed, had befriended some of the slaves under Caliph al-Muntasir and incited an earlier, short-lived rebellion in Bahrain. For 10 points, name this massive ninth-century revolt of some 500,000 African slaves against the Abbasid Empire.
ANSWER: Zanj Revolt
cvdwightw wrote:Kyle (I'm assuming questions are cleared for discussion, since they're being discussed):Kyle wrote:Regarding the Zanj revolt itself, I am trying to imagine a tossup on it. In my mind, there are six lines of obscure things that nobody could possibly be expected to buzz on followed by an allusion to the fact that they are black and then a mention of the Abbasid caliphate. No?
UCLA/South Carolina Packet wrote: This event was centered in the city of al-Mukhtare, and many of the people involved in this event had been imported for the back-breaking work of clearing out the marshes in the Tigris River basin. The leader of this movement adopted the position of the Kharajites in saying that leadership should be based on abilities and not on heredity, but only after his own claims of descent had been disproved. It allowed the existence of an independent Egypt for its length and originated around the salt mines in the city of Basra, which was besieged for fifteen years by this movement. Its leader claimed descent from Caliph Ali ibn Abu Talib; that leader, Ali ibn Muhammed, had befriended some of the slaves under Caliph al-Muntasir and incited an earlier, short-lived rebellion in Bahrain. For 10 points, name this massive ninth-century revolt of some 500,000 African slaves against the Abbasid Empire.
ANSWER: Zanj Revolt
I wanted to expand on this a bit further--I think it might be useful to make a clear distinction between "tournaments that are about learning" and "tournaments that are about competition/ranking teams/meaningful games." I think those two goals are not completely mutually exclusive, but I think it's certainly the case that a tournament can't feature meaningful games if a large fraction of the questions are written with the intent of "teaching the field," even if the question writers believe those questions will be answered by the end. In order for a game to be meaningful, the teams involved don't just have to answer 17+ tossups and play on a consistent set of bonuses (so the match isn't decided by one team getting lucky in having 3 easy bonuses vs. the other team only having 1); I think the questions also have to be written in such a way that there are a few early buzzes and a large number of middle buzzes. If most of the questions are still live at the end, the chances of having games being decided on buzzer races shoots up.Bentley Like Beckham wrote:Meaningful games I would define based on factors like "what percentage of the questions do teams have a chance to answer"? The middle bracket, consisting of teams that are almost all top bracket teams in their regions, averaged missing more than 5 tossups per round and a bonus conversion of around 10 PPB. When you filter that down some more to account for teams that are more along the lines of middle of the pack in their respective regions, those games become even more dismal and prone to the luck of the draw factors that Charlies described.
Chris Ray got it well before that point in my room if I remember correctly, but I'm sure Chris himself remembers better. Anyway, I read for some of the top teams at the event (Minn, Brown, etc.) and noticed several tossups go past "for 10 points" or go unanswered. Say what you want about the Zanj question, but it was far from the hardest question at the tournament and contained clues that would allow someone who knows their stuff to get the question well before "for 10 points."Kyle wrote: Regarding the Zanj revolt itself, I am trying to imagine a tossup on it. In my mind, there are six lines of obscure things that nobody could possibly be expected to buzz on followed by an allusion to the fact that they are black and then a mention of the Abbasid caliphate. No?
I agree, especially on the stats part. Being able to check stats on my teammate's iPhone on the drive back was awesome.dtaylor4 wrote:
Phil: as a statkeeper and a quasi-assistant TD (I was effectively in charge of the part of the tournament in Seigle), I feel that I did my job as well as I could.
Thanks for the insight. Honestly, I don't think you should regret the former either. Forcing top-level teams to play slap bowl would have been nothing short of travesty, and even as we waited on our game, we were all in agreement on that point. I can't remember when we got the word, but it didn't seem like we were in the dark too long.dtaylor4 wrote:During the buzzer fiasco, Matt asked me to hold everyone up and to get working buzzers to the top games. After sending three buzzers over there, I tried to call Matt to ask whether he wanted me to start Round 2 or not. After being unable to reach him by phone, I made the call to hold everyone up until all the Round 1 games were completed. I felt that this was the right call, and do not regret it. What I do regret is not getting the word to the teams sooner, and for that I apologize.
I didn't go to Minnesota Open, so I couldn't care less about what happened at a non-national tournament that I didn't attend and whose TDs were not involved in ACF Nationals in any way. I also don't care about what happened last year; I didn't have much of a problem with the one day tournament because I accepted the fact that 16 or 17 rounds in one day would result in a late ending. That was totally acceptable to me before and would have been acceptable again if it had happened.Matt Weiner wrote:1) When all was said and done, the tournament, which I had announced last August would target an end time of 1:00 PM, actually completed the last question of the finals at 2:15 PM. That's not ideal, but it's not anything near tournaments like Minnesota Open's Saturday lineup this year (which had to be cut short because the building closed at 2 AM), ACF Nationals last year (which ended at 11 PM), or sundry other events who missed the mark by well more than an hour. I frankly think it's incredibly unwise to book a flight for 3:30 for a tournament that aspires to end around 1:00, and then be surprised or angry when you miss that flight.
Why didn't anyone notice this before? Again, I've run a 24 team tournament before. No one who attended EFT will let me lie about this, but I'm fairly positive that the schedules we handed out on the morning of the tournament did not have any of these problems. As Eric, Dennis, and Aaron are my witnesses, I will also state that prior to the tournament we had repeatedly discussed contingency schedules in case some teams didn't show, and we were ready to accommodate that situation. Fortunately, we didn't have to do that, but we certainly had a plan. None of this planning took more than an hour all told between us.2) We had prepared and copied the following schedule in advance for Saturday morning: http://web.archive.org/web/200502101941 ... ps/13.html. As you can see, it's nonsense; teams are playing in two places in the same round and so on. Someone noticed this as the schedule was first being handed out, luckily.
I mean, I realize that you're not just sitting in the staff room cackling about making the peons wait. However, the fact that this was even an issue is prima facie evidence of massive incompetence. No one thought to check the schedules? No one thought there should be a contingency plan? I can't believe that for a national tournament these simple steps could not be taken.For a tournament as important as ACF Nationals, it was a major error on my part to trust the schedule without rechecking it by hand. However, I hope you understand why I thought that "The College Quizbowl Schedule Database" might have schedules that could actually be used for college quizbowl. This assumption turned out to be erroneous, leading to all of the other problems. In addition to the confusion over McMaster, we then had to recreate the whole schedule so it actually made sense, and then (for reasons never really explained to me, which for all I know were perfectly good ones) it took far more than 30 minutes for someone to go print 40 copies of the schedule. That is why there was a delay on Saturday morning. This idea that we were all just standing around not starting because it was fun to make people wait, or whatever you think happened, is not realistic.
I'm getting angry over it because we went to a lot of trouble to get our team there on time, including but not limited to blowing $30 on a cab ride when I could have just picked them up myself if we weren't going to start on time anyway. Dan and I could probably have played the first few rounds by ourselves if we had to, but our teammates had to board ass-early flights to get there. To demand that we arrive on time but to not fulfill your own promise of a timely start is a slap in the face of our efforts.I was also given to understand that half of Brown's team was planning to arrive at the tournament during what would have been Round 2 had we started on time; the delay must have proved immensely helpful to Brown's competitive chances, and thus for Jerry, specifically, to get angry over it seems weird.
If we hadn't more or less on a whim decided to bring a set of buzzers with us, this tournament would have been even more screwed. I can't imagine why you would possibly turn down an offer of buzzer sets; at least my experience tells me that there are never enough buzzers. At the very least, extra buzzers would have just sat around, and at best they could have been used to replace the non-functional buzzers.3) The volume-of-buzzers situation was almost entirely my fault. While I am a little irked that many people either left their buzzers at home or brought broken buzzers to this tournament and claimed discounts for them, it is also true that Sean offered last week to procure buzzers from local high schools. I have never had a problem getting sufficient buzzers to show up to a tournament before so I assumed this would still be the case and told him not to bother. This was, in retrospect, a very stupid decision on my part, and had I not made it we would not have had the buzzer problem even considering the other issues that contributed to it.
Hey, looks like more than one person dropped the ball here! Yeah, I don't know why communication between you and the rest of the staffers is such a problem, but I don't see how I'm supposed to divine any of this or care about it if I do. If you can't trust the people staffing your tournament to do basic things like put working buzzers in the playoff rooms then it sounds to me like you made a horrendous call on where to hold the tournament. If you had any suspicion that there could be problems, then yes, I would expect you to check the system placement yourself. After all, you had the entire Saturday evening to take care of this; surely it doesn't take more than 15 minutes of your time to check the rooms in a single building. I can't imagine anything else that was going on at the oh-so-late hour of 7 PM when the games ended. Anyway, this was brought to your attention as soon as we discovered what had happened, and instead of having anything done about it, we had to wait until another game finished reading before we could even start the first one.4) With that said, the buzzer situation was aggravated by some poor coordination from the local staffers. I did in fact see Charlie's buzzers, and I asked the people who were handing out buzzers "hey, are those Charlie's buzzers?" to which I was told "no, that's just somebody's backpack." Between Saturday night and Sunday morning I reminded the buzzer controllers five distinct times to put the working systems in the playoff rooms, and exactly the opposite was done. Unless you expect me to personally set up every system and read every game, I don't know what more I could have contributed to trying to salvage the buzzer situation for Sunday.
It is simply unbelievable to me that someone who has, in the chat and other contexts, repeatedly labeled network-based attempts at a scorekeeping system as examples of magical thinking (paraphrasing loosely here) and pointed out the problems of such a system by referencing the problem of spotty or encrypted campus wifi coverage, would now turn to the absence of unprotected wireless as an excuse! The moment you got whiff of protected wireless, you should have gathered up a few flash drives and sent a runner to each building with the questions. This is a tried and true system of question distribution that has seemed to work just fine for past tournaments.5) In the week before the tournament I was also told, repeatedly, that all the rooms had unpassworded wireless, so it would be easy to e-mail packets out before each round. As it turned out, 1 of the 2 buildings we used had no wireless coverage at all, and in the other, passwords (which nobody seemed to have) were required. This forced us to go to plan B, encrypted packets, which led to the same problems it always does.
I don't know anything about the high school tournaments you may or may not have directed, and I don't care either. I attended VCU Open where we sat around for two hours waiting for you to finish the set (and then had to come back the next day to play the finals!). I flew to Illinois, at non-inconsiderable expense, to play FICHTE only to be utterly disappointed by the quality of a tournament for which I also had to wait two hours in the morning (edited for confusion with ACF Regionals) (and the portions were so small!). Then I flew to ACF Nationals, where again I had to wait for near two hours for the tournament to get started on the first day and another hour to get started on the second day because simple things that should be obviously taken care of beforehand were not taken care of. These are objective facts which I have personally experienced; whatever might happen at VCU tournaments is beyond my interest. I'm also not interested in comparing this particular disaster to other mishaps, except perhaps to note that there are two incidences listed above of you completely failing to deliver on promised questions without previous notification.6) I have directed 30 tournaments, most of which (such as the February and April high school tournaments at VCU, see the threads on this board) were met with comments such as "the best tournament I have ever attended" and completed 11 or more rounds by 4:30 PM. The idea that I am an incompetent tournament director is objectively false. I apologize for my role in your missed flight and any frustrating aspects of your tournament experience, but I believe you are flailing about due to your anger over the real issues and hitting some of the wrong targets along with the legitimate ones here. We all have done things to both hurt and help the image of ACF, and the idea that this weekend's delays, which in the end amounted to finishing 75 minutes after the posted target end time, were a bigger problem than any of various question-related incidents or public meltdowns that people have been responsible for in the past, does not hold water to me.
grapesmoker wrote:Yeah, I don't know why communication between you and the rest of the staffers is such a problem, but I don't see how I'm supposed to divine any of this or care about it if I do.
This post doesn't seem like an honest attempt to find out what went wrong and why if it contains such statements. You can't just make assertions and then dismiss the evidence that those assertions are wrong with "I don't care."I don't know anything about the high school tournaments you may or may not have directed, and I don't care either.
This is exactly what I did.The moment you got whiff of protected wireless, you should have gathered up a few flash drives and sent a runner to each building with the questions.
You did absolutely no such thing. Question quality issues aside, the Illinois tournament (notably not directed by me, in any case) started on time, as I have just confirmed with various people who staffed and played it. Quit making things up.I flew to Illinois, at non-inconsiderable expense, to play FICHTE only to be utterly disappointed by the quality of a tournament for which I also had to wait two hours in the morning
I don't recall this, and in any case they were already being put on other drives, so I don't see how it would have helped anything.When there were delays getting the questions distributed, I offered to put them on a flash key so we could start the round. I was rebuffed.
The tiebreaker schedule was announced several days earlier and in the morning on Saturday. Teams were told they could leave after Round 13. It was completely impossible to go back on that decision halfway through Saturday games and it's unreasonable that you really think I could have done so.I agitated for the tiebreakers to be held on Friday Saturday so the tournament could start earlier and was given some bullshit about not wanting tiredness affecting playoffs, as though no one has ever played a meaningful match at that hour before.
The reason was that WUSTL set up the buzzers in the wrong rooms despite myself and Zeke specifically telling them which rooms to set them up in five times.I repeatedly informed you before the tournament that I thought the playoffs on Sunday should start earlier; I don't expect the tournament to be shuffled around for my sake, but there's no reason why we couldn't have started right at 9
Nobody should have been happy. I agree that the delays were awful and that the major cause was my bad decision regarding the extra buzzers. However, the delay on Saturday morning had nothing to do with you missing your plane, which is what you are actually making crazy phone calls to me about and posting on the Internet. I said that "gameplay" for this tournament would end at 1 PM; I didn't even say whether that meant general playoffs or the finals, and the finals ended at 2:15. If you have never heard of a tournament running one hour late before, or if you think the example of every other event you have attended is something you "don't care" about, that is your problem. You shouldn't have booked a flight with no room for error.Every time I approached you (and it wasn't just me, for the record) I was told that things were being taken care of. Maybe they were, maybe they weren't, but in every situation your reply was to brush off legitimate complaints. Now you are doing your best to pretend that this is some minor issue that only affected one person, even though my conversation with other people leads me quite conclusively to the belief that pretty much everyone was pissed about the various delays and buzzer shortages and so forth. Maybe you're used to dealing with cranky high school coaches that get all upset because their team has to listed to a question longer than one line or something, but people like myself, Andrew Yaphe, and Mike Sorice, for example, are not idiots that can be waved away because you think that your shortcomings are not serious (note: this is not to imply that either Mike or Andrew endorse what I'm saying, but it seemed to me that they were not happy with the delays as well).
I'm dumb for relying too much on the local staff, but I'm also dumb for acting "in an autocratic manner"? This is nonsense.The reason you're getting flack from it is because you have a tendency to act in an autocratic manner; well, that means you get the credit and you take the blame.
Yeah, urban planning really sits at the odd nexus of geography, social science, and architecture, and could go really into any of those baskets. (I'd actually put Hausmann in history, fwiw.) I'm a fan of using that material to write geography questions that are more relevant and interesting than your standard atlas fare, especially since SS is so underrepresented as it is- I know I've mentioned this before, but take a look at the "Oregon" tossup I wrote for TIT for an example of what I think is a really good way to get this material in the canon (and improve geography questions to boot).Strongside wrote:Also, I don't know if it matters to anyone, but I am a urban studies major, and a geography minor. I have taken 4 geography classes, and five urban studies classes. Urban Studies can be best described as a subdivision of the geography department at Minnesota. One thing I have noticed is that not much of my geography knowledge comes from the classes I have taken.
The classes I have taken have given me some history and social science knowledge. (Baron Haussmann, Jane Jacobs, Saul Alinsky, William Julius Wilson, Robert Putnam, 7th century Islamic history, Jane Byrne). I am also planning on taking at least two more geography classes, (Biogeography, and Geographic Information Systems), and I doubt these will help me much with quiz bowl geography.
I don't mean to make it sound like bragging about what I have learned in school, but I thought I would point this out.
I'll do my best!Cheynem wrote:Urban Studies is awesome. If you can somehow get Andres Duany and Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk into the canon, that would be great.
Sir, I have a HI finals packet you might be interested in...Theory Of The Leisure Flask wrote:I'll do my best!Cheynem wrote:Urban Studies is awesome. If you can somehow get Andres Duany and Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk into the canon, that would be great.
Also: Jane Jacobs is super-important and should be the go-to urban planner in quizbowl instead of Lewis Mumford, who is also important I guess but nowhere near as well known or influential in the real world. I was heartened to see her come up at ICT.
I'm not sure how much of Jerry's rage is fueled by his missing his flight. I took for granted that the tournament wouldn't possibly finish by 1, and insisted that my teammates get flights which left in the evening, so this wasn't an issue for us. In any event, I think it would be helpful if we could focus on what Matt correctly describes as the "huge problems" with this tournament, and not allow the usual distractions of "I liked/disliked [this one question]" or "I am really delighted/incensed about [this one thing that happened]" get in the way of a substantive breakdown of the tournament.Matt Weiner wrote: There were huge problems with this tournament. Many of them were my fault. Others were not. Jerry missing his plane was no one's fault but his own for scheduling a flight on razor-thin time margins. I am interested in helping analyze the real problems and developing suggestions for next year's Nationals TD on how to avoid repeating them. I am not interested in exchanging a volley of namecalling with Jerry over the air travel thing. I will stand by everything in this paragraph as long as needed.
What is there in that post that I need to care about? Your high school tournaments mean nothing to me, and the communication breakdown between you and WUSTL is a problem I can't be expected to diagnose.Matt Weiner wrote:This post doesn't seem like an honest attempt to find out what went wrong and why if it contains such statements. You can't just make assertions and then dismiss the evidence that those assertions are wrong with "I don't care."
That's not what happened in our room at all. We had a moderator run out and come back several times and then a bunch of dudes come in and check emails before we finally got started. It was close to 10 when I called you and specifically asked you if I could come down and get the packet on a flash disk and you said no. This happened.This is exactly what I did.
Yeah, I totally confused that with Regionals. Edited and retracted above.You did absolutely no such thing. Question quality issues aside, the Illinois tournament (notably not directed by me, in any case) started on time, as I have just confirmed with various people who staffed and played it. Quit making things up.
It was entirely possible to do tiebreakers that day. The notion that delaying teams by another half hour constitutes some sort of impossibility is absurd.The tiebreaker schedule was announced several days earlier and in the morning on Saturday. Teams were told they could leave after Round 13. It was completely impossible to go back on that decision halfway through Saturday games and it's unreasonable that you really think I could have done so.
Did everyone at WUSTL get retarded between Saturday and Sunday or what? Saturday there were working buzzers and Sunday there weren't? Maybe trusting idiots isn't the best plan then.The reason was that WUSTL set up the buzzers in the wrong rooms despite myself and Zeke specifically telling them which rooms to set them up in five times.
This is the single most disingenuous statement I've read concerning tournament direction ever. If you tell me that gameplay is projected to end at 1, that means ALL gameplay, not whatever you define as gameplay after the fact because you got called on inexcusable delays. You are literally redefining words to suit your argument.I said that "gameplay" for this tournament would end at 1 PM; I didn't even say whether that meant general playoffs or the finals, and the finals ended at 2:15. If you have never heard of a tournament running one hour late before, or if you think the example of every other event you have attended is something you "don't care" about, that is your problem. You shouldn't have booked a flight with no room for error.
These can both be true and you damn well know it. You basically acted like you had everything under control when in fact the tournament was falling apart underneath you.I'm dumb for relying too much on the local staff, but I'm also dumb for acting "in an autocratic manner"? This is nonsense.
You had 6 rounds to run, with all the teams already being in place, and no possible source of delay other than the ineptitude of the staff. Your tournament was a logistical failure and your inability to coordinate things properly directly caused the delays that led to my subsequent problems. I haven't seen any evidence that contradicts this assertion and a lot of evidence for it, as well as plenty of instances of you all of a sudden eager to take the high road of civil discourse when the tide of the evidence is clearly against you.There were huge problems with this tournament. Many of them were my fault. Others were not. Jerry missing his plane was no one's fault but his own for scheduling a flight on razor-thin time margins. I am interested in helping analyze the real problems and developing suggestions for next year's Nationals TD on how to avoid repeating them. I am not interested in exchanging a volley of namecalling with Jerry over the air travel thing. I will stand by everything in this paragraph as long as needed.
Can I ask where this idea is coming from? I have heard of some people chipping in some freelance questions down the stretch, but I was unaware that the packets were finished right on Saturday and Saturday night (at least to the extent this is suggesting--Matt has admitted a handful of tossups were written on Saturday night for the finals on Sunday). I mean, this idea has been repeated by a few people, but I hadn't even heard of it until these posts.Birdofredum Sawin wrote: that the first day's packets were only finished a few hours before the tournament was scheduled to get underway, and the second day's packets had to be finished Saturday night; and that so many people had to be exhorted at the last minute to pitch in just so the set could be finished. I don't know whether Matt was overconfident, or delusional, or what, but this is absurd.
The Burmese history question had a part about SLORC, which seemed well below "Chicago or beyond" difficulty. SLORC has been a tossup answer at past tournaments, I believe.Birdofredum Sawin wrote: But we zeroed a string of "Chicago Open or beyond" bonuses (on, e.g., Burmese history and obscure geoscience), while they 20'd and 30'd a string of much easier bonuses (on, e.g., the poetry of Robert Browning, where "My Last Duchess" from obvious clues would have gotten most high school teams an easy 10).
Having worked on the tournament in a non-editing/non-writing role, I can still say that, by late Friday night/Saturday morning, almost every packet was done. I think 4 packets (all of them intended for play on Sunday) had around 1-5 or so questions not finished, and these were all finished by sometime early Saturday evening, with randomizing taking place later in the night. Perhaps it's not ideal to finish this last minute (although secondhand knowledge leads me to believe that this is not uncommon), but the tournament was finished well in time for play.Cheynem wrote:Can I ask where this idea is coming from? I have heard of some people chipping in some freelance questions down the stretch, but I was unaware that the packets were finished right on Saturday and Saturday night (at least to the extent this is suggesting--Matt has admitted a handful of tossups were written on Saturday night for the finals on Sunday). I mean, this idea has been repeated by a few people, but I hadn't even heard of it until these posts.Birdofredum Sawin wrote: that the first day's packets were only finished a few hours before the tournament was scheduled to get underway, and the second day's packets had to be finished Saturday night; and that so many people had to be exhorted at the last minute to pitch in just so the set could be finished. I don't know whether Matt was overconfident, or delusional, or what, but this is absurd.