Derailing "Is it worth it?"
Posted: Wed Oct 27, 1999 12:30 pm
Starting a new thread because it's a direct response but could spark a new battle:
<p>
Easy Part:
I'll back any cutoff around 30% or less. I'll at least think hard about supporting a higher one.
<p>
I don't really like the idea, but I'd accept 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1.
<p>
Hard Part:
If it goes back to 10-3-1 I'm gone. Stig "Sir Charles" Remnes may say that every other post but this is the very first time you've ever heard it from Aquatarkus. The following will show I'm completely serious and hopefully convince.
<p>
It should have been clear earlier in MARP history, but was either accidentally overlooked or intentionally sidestepped, that the 70% difference in points between first and second places encourages cheating. It was a vague, undefined thought of mine at the time I joined the debate that got MARP the percentage scoring system. At this point it's in full Dolby Surround Sound.
<p>
The major argument for having a big point jump between first and second is that it encourages competition. With real rules it might work, but it's irrelevant because that's not the situation we're in. We're using a program with no built in safeguards to compete with hundreds of people we don't know and will probably never meet. Even if we completely trust in the MARP regulars following the rules (which is totally unfounded), most MARP players send in a few scores and vanish without a word. The scoring system under MARP conditions has to be linear to minimize the effect of cheating on the results.
<p>
I haven't posted an "I DON'T CHEAT!!!" message on the forum because it won't help. It's 1999, Clinton has been in office for 7 years, so if you don't understand why asking for denials is pointless you have a great future in political journalism.
<p>
To Chris Parsley: I'm sorry I didn't say anything explicitly about the cheating concerns I had with 10-3-1 or your expanded variation during the original debate. A MAME:CE (with a corresponding MAME32:CE) that poses a significant barrier to cheating could change MARP conditions enough to make your idea workable.
<p>
To Phil Lamat: Your posts on the argument surrounding Track 'N Field tell me you don't have unlimited faith in your fellow gamers. If you think some of your scores have been and will be passed by cheaters, doesn't it make sense to cut the amount of credit they get for it?
<p>
Aqua
<p>
BTW, for those of you who don't follow the NBA future hall of famer "Sir" Charles Barkley has announced his impending retirement after each season this decade.
--
aquatarkus@digicron.com
<p>
Easy Part:
I'll back any cutoff around 30% or less. I'll at least think hard about supporting a higher one.
<p>
I don't really like the idea, but I'd accept 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1.
<p>
Hard Part:
If it goes back to 10-3-1 I'm gone. Stig "Sir Charles" Remnes may say that every other post but this is the very first time you've ever heard it from Aquatarkus. The following will show I'm completely serious and hopefully convince.
<p>
It should have been clear earlier in MARP history, but was either accidentally overlooked or intentionally sidestepped, that the 70% difference in points between first and second places encourages cheating. It was a vague, undefined thought of mine at the time I joined the debate that got MARP the percentage scoring system. At this point it's in full Dolby Surround Sound.
<p>
The major argument for having a big point jump between first and second is that it encourages competition. With real rules it might work, but it's irrelevant because that's not the situation we're in. We're using a program with no built in safeguards to compete with hundreds of people we don't know and will probably never meet. Even if we completely trust in the MARP regulars following the rules (which is totally unfounded), most MARP players send in a few scores and vanish without a word. The scoring system under MARP conditions has to be linear to minimize the effect of cheating on the results.
<p>
I haven't posted an "I DON'T CHEAT!!!" message on the forum because it won't help. It's 1999, Clinton has been in office for 7 years, so if you don't understand why asking for denials is pointless you have a great future in political journalism.
<p>
To Chris Parsley: I'm sorry I didn't say anything explicitly about the cheating concerns I had with 10-3-1 or your expanded variation during the original debate. A MAME:CE (with a corresponding MAME32:CE) that poses a significant barrier to cheating could change MARP conditions enough to make your idea workable.
<p>
To Phil Lamat: Your posts on the argument surrounding Track 'N Field tell me you don't have unlimited faith in your fellow gamers. If you think some of your scores have been and will be passed by cheaters, doesn't it make sense to cut the amount of credit they get for it?
<p>
Aqua
<p>
BTW, for those of you who don't follow the NBA future hall of famer "Sir" Charles Barkley has announced his impending retirement after each season this decade.
--
aquatarkus@digicron.com