Wireless Scoring What are your views?
#1
Posted 2012-July-05, 21:04
We are not a big club running 2 games a week; but, often with 2 sections.
We would appreciate reading about your feelings/experiences re: wireless scoring
either from a player's point of view or from a director's point of view.
Wireless scoring and an automatic dealer cost about the same to implement.
Would a club's membership derive more benefit from wireless scoring or from an automatic dealer?
#2
Posted 2012-July-05, 21:55
Dealing machines are great if you have lots of members who like to go through a hand record at the end of session, but if few people do that the only real advantages of a dealing machine is the ability to participate in multi-club simultaneous events and, in theory at least, be able to have boards that better conform to bridge odds than manually dealt boards which can have a tendancy to be a bit flatter if people don't shuffle thoroughly.
Electronic scoring has a few major advantages, principally the availability of results within a few seconds of the last table finishing. There are other benefits such as better scoring accuracy, faster movements and less post mortems.
Personally, I think you should try to get both but if you could only have one, I'd go for the dealing machine.
I ♦ bidding the suit below the suit I'm actually showing not to be described as a "transfer" for the benefit of people unfamiliar with the concept of a transfer
#3
Posted 2012-July-05, 23:14
Electronic scoring seems to be more for directors - they don't have to score the things, they can just let the players do it and relax. Yes, it saves time at the end of the session, but there is usually some frustration by players learning how to use the machines, and quite a few scoring errors to correct while in the learning stage. Also, I've found that electronic scoring actually INCREASES the post-morteming at one club I go to, because everyone asks what their percentage is an why and what the other people were doing, and then they try and figure it out...its possible to turn off that information, but the club I go to does not.
If I didn't have to choose, I'd like them both. But since you are asking to make a choice, I'd go dealing machine.
#4
Posted 2012-July-06, 01:08
The electronic scorers do save the director some time -- but their real value is when you use them to display the contracts and opening leads, rather than the bare numbers-only ACBLscore printout. The usual ways of doing that tend to have hand records tied in too. Local club here has them both.
They also are portable. A dealing machine is real handy if you have your own building. But if you have to store equipment in a closet it is much more trouble than it is worth to drag it out and put it away (and it needs to be onsite - 51-and-53 type problems happen as much as once a session in our club and the usual fix is running the board through the machine again to redeal it.)
I could live quite happily without either one - did for years - and also live happily with both now. I would find it hard to have only one, if I could only have one.
#5
Posted 2012-July-06, 01:43
You guys seem to be asking the wrong questions ....geeZ
I mean everyone knows 2 is bigger than one or ........high tech is better than low tech but that is not the issue.
We are told in the OP only 2 games a week and we do not have unlimited monies.
Question one.....If I invest a lot of money what is my return?
#6
Posted 2012-July-06, 02:08
The club has considered wireless scoring but does not feel that the benefits are sufficient yet. The main benefit of wireless scoring is seen as immediate results, but as people go home after the game the fact that the results are available on the internet about an hour later is not a problem.
It is different in Edinburgh where a lot of people disappear down the pub after the game. Here immediate results are valued and wireless scoring is used, although to be fair it was not much slower without the bridgepads. It must be said that it seems to take longer to start playing with wireless scoring (since latecomers mess the movement more) and more training required for the scorers.
#7
Posted 2012-July-06, 02:12
So I guess the question is do your 2 games a week already have pre-made hands with hand records? If so, you'd probably get more bang for you buck for the players by getting the wireless machines. But if not, getting the dealing machine would be best as moving to hand records is a much bigger change.
#8
Posted 2012-July-06, 02:40
these comments silly
i get the feeling you are all computer majors.
#9
Posted 2012-July-06, 02:46
mike777, on 2012-July-06, 02:40, said:
I am a maths graduate. Can you not see the benefit of gaining hand records? Surely this represents a serious upgrade to the "product"?
Also, the poll question asked the relative merits of one investment over the other. Presumably the fourth option (no value) was added for anyone who thinks that both would be a poor investment. As Mbodell says, if the club already provides hand records then this changes things somewhat. I suspect most of those who have voted have done so under the assumption that the club does not currently provide these.
#10
Posted 2012-July-06, 02:57
Zelandakh, on 2012-July-06, 02:46, said:
Also, the poll question asked the relative merits of one investment over the other. Presumably the fourth option (no value) was added for anyone who thinks that both would be a poor investment. As Mbodell says, if the club already provides hand records then this changes things somewhat. I suspect most of those who have voted have done so under the assumption that the club does not currently provide these.
you are blind to the important questions..
you only see the simple ones
you make huge, random, facts.....too many
#11
Posted 2012-July-06, 09:23
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#12
Posted 2012-July-06, 09:41
#13
Posted 2012-July-06, 11:16
Hand records are, to serious players, a benefit. But the serious players are grossly outnumbered by the casual players at club games. In my experience it won't fly unless it is nearly hassle-free.
@mike777... return on investment? Neither one is bringing you in a penny. That isn't a factor imo. Though the dealing machine may drive a few suspicious casual players away temporarily.
#14
Posted 2012-July-06, 11:32
I have also heard that in the not-too-distant-future, you'll see an iPhone app for scoring.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#15
Posted 2012-July-06, 11:45
Phil, on 2012-July-06, 11:32, said:
http://www.androidzo...lesk_cimyq.html - for Androids, not iPhones
London UK
#16
Posted 2012-July-06, 12:02
mike777, on 2012-July-06, 01:43, said:
You guys seem to be asking the wrong questions ....geeZ
I mean everyone knows 2 is bigger than one or ........high tech is better than low tech but that is not the issue.
We are told in the OP only 2 games a week and we do not have unlimited monies.
Question one.....If I invest a lot of money what is my return?
This wasn't posed as a "what's best for the club" question, it was posed as "what's best for the players". You should read the OP before handing out irrelevent criticism, IMO.
#17
Posted 2012-July-06, 12:33
I really like having hand records--a lot. I also like having cards well shuffled. It's a pet peeve of mine when people half heartedly cut the cards twice and then deal.
If you're going to do either, I think the players would much rather have a dealer than wireless scoring--not least because many of the older players at my club still cannot operate the score pads and find them more an annoyance than a benefit.
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#18
Posted 2012-July-06, 13:31
Siegmund, on 2012-July-06, 11:16, said:
Hand records are, to serious players, a benefit. But the serious players are grossly outnumbered by the casual players at club games. In my experience it won't fly unless it is nearly hassle-free.
You are missing the third option, which as I said was extremely common around me before the machines were purchased, which is the directors hand duplicate the hands before the session. Not the players duplicate the hands, the directors. The directors can ask players to suit and sort the hands at the end of the night (while they are waiting for the slow table to finish and the results to be posted), and practiced directors can make a set of boards from suited and sorted cards very quickly (like 20 minutes a board set).
But I agree that hand records are the biggest win for the players, so if you don't currently provide them, and the dealing machine lets you provide them, then it is a no brainer. If you currently have hand records, then it is a much closer decision.
#19
Posted 2012-July-06, 13:47
The automated scoring actually annoys a lot of players. First, people have to learn to use the machines -- in principle this is not hard but many bridge players are older and have difficulty reading the devices and/or operating electronics. Second, you have to decide whether to include summaries of what other people did on the board. There are basically three options here (no information which bothers players accustomed to travelers, percentage only which leads to a lot of often-loud speculation about why the board scored that way, or complete results which often leads to loud discussion of the hand, for some reason even more than travelers do). Third, you occasionally have a complete disaster if there is a power failure or computer breakdown, which can ruin a whole session. Of course, there are definitely benefits to electronic scoring (faster results, electronic summary sheets including what every pair did on every board, eliminating certain kinds of scoring errors) but it's going to annoy at least as many players (at least initially) as it pleases.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#20
Posted 2012-July-06, 13:50
Mbodell, on 2012-July-06, 13:31, said:
Definitely agree with this. Depending on your player base, this could increase your attendance and contribute to its own cost.
Personally I don't care about wireless scoring at all. Printout after the game and full results next day online is all I ever need. So if there are already hand records, I would say buy neither the dealer nor the wireless, find something else to spend the money on. For the cost of a dealer, you could offer free pizza once a month for five years. That might bring in some players too.
-gwnn