Eindhoven Day 3
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It's enough to make you envious: The entire Saturday, especially in the morning, the audience flocked to the ticket office. How did they do that? I wish I'd had a crowd like that in Kassel at the German Open.
But once again it became clear that if the audience is not told what the individual disciplines are all about, it quickly becomes boring. We still have a lot of work to do on that. (Yes, of course, soccer doesn't need to be explained, which is why the spectators spent most of their time there...)
Yes, anyone who thinks that scoring the highest number of points in the heats means everything is sorted has made a big mistake. Yes, "BioBrause" is ahead on points (see below), but there is still the challenge, which counts for 10% of the score. It starts at 9 o'clock: Explanation of what needs to be done differently now. Black: The number of rescue kits discarded for visual victims is set to zero, for blue the color victims are set to zero. And so on. If you know your program, it's "child's play" (well, that's what you say...) to rewrite it, in no less than 2 hours.
There was nothing to watch in that time. Kathrin and I roamed the grounds again. A robot that writes on the asphalt with quartz sand. Cool idea.
Finally a perfect run, awesome. The referees were of the opinion that it wasn't, but there is video evidence (soon to be published on the BioBrause channel). The Japanese team had a lack of progress. Actually, it can't be any different now: BioBrause will be world champions. We'll see, but it can't be any other way.
And then in the afternoon, the announcement of the super team task. Unfortunately far too difficult. In my opinion, it's all about two teams from different parts of the world working together to accomplish something. Result: programming until late into the night. No, that should be different.