barmar, on 2012-April-02, 08:35, said:
Anything is possible, if we're willing to redesign GIB. Your suggestion is more than just a minor tweak, so we're less likely to attempt it.
That seems be a pretty extreme supposition. Unless there are lots of players bidding like this, it doesn't seem like there's much value in redesigning GIB to learn about them.
Maybe it would make sense for GIB to keep some statistics to find out just how widespread the phenomenon is.
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It seems like you want us to redesign GIB just because Leo has learned how to get good results against them. Instead of having the computer make things harder for him, why don't you just learn from him and beat him at his own game? If he can get good results by opening out-of-range 1NT, so can you.
I'm not interested in playing robot tournaments, though I'm sure there are some people trying to play their normal game whose results are negatively affected; still, I don't think that who exactly wins these tournaments is particularly relevant.
What matters to me is that the ACBL are awarding masterpoints for a game that breaks several laws plus its own regulations. It's easy to say "who cares?", but a lot of people must be interested in these points, as the ACBL (fee-charging) Robot Games are more popular than similar free games. Recently a poster expressed dismay at the fact that the points that he spent years travelling around to tournaments to accumulate can now be had by sitting in front of the computer for a few months. Hell, probably many people don't even bother with that -- they have programmed their own bots to play with the GIBs and earn their masterpoints.
So where is the incentive to earn points "the old-fashioned way"? And should I care? Well, I do. For me, bridge is a card game played by four people sitting at a table, preferably surrounded by a lot of other tables with four people at each also playing cards. If nothin would be very sad if the real game lost out to the online form, let alone to an online form that didn't involve any actual human interactions. And while I don't play in the ACBL myself, I fear that trends set in the NBO with the largest and most numerous tournaments will eventually be followed elsewhere.
Anyway, so wishing that the ACBL would award its masterpoints to a game that was a reasonable facsimile of the one played with people and cards is a very modest wish for me, and would perhaps only satisfy a principle. I do think, somehow, that it is important.
If nothing else, it would make it a lot easier for robot players to transition into live bridge if it were roughly the same game.
I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones -- Albert Einstein