CQ-Contest
[Top] [All Lists]

Re: [CQ-Contest] When it's over, it's over (again)

To: cq-contest@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] When it's over, it's over (again)
From: W0MU Mike Fatchett <w0mu@w0mu.com>
Date: Thu, 10 Nov 2016 17:59:27 -0700
List-post: <cq-contest@contesting.com">mailto:cq-contest@contesting.com>
I would like to believe that all of us who were attempting to pass emergency traffic would slow down enough to ensure we get that information 100 percent correct. The example given is not really what contesting is. Do I believe that contesters would be better as high volume traffic passing. Yes.
Training in the FD is important doing live fire exercises ups the 
attention.  Going on a real call really ups the attention and how things 
are done.  Training is great but there is no substitute for the real 
thing.  We can talk all day about how to fight a wild fire and all the 
things that happen.  You can't really grasp every concept or what you 
will really see and have to deal with until you are on a real fire.
Apples to Oranges comparison in regards to the prescription.

A live scoring/checking system would be amazing! I suspect the bust rate would go down if we had such a system.
People will game the game as much as possible, not saying they are 
cheating necessarily but taking short cuts in "practice" events.
W0MU


On 11/10/2016 9:18 AM, Ward Silver wrote:
> If it wasn't a penmanship contest then, why is it a typing contest now?

At the risk of setting off a "plastic owl pointing true north by remote control" thread...
Why is it that we have contests at all?  It is to practice our ability 
to communicate and to reward effectiveness - in whatever form that 
takes.  Part of it is knowing when the bands are open and closed.  
Part of it is assembling a station that works well. Part of it is 
having good operating technique.  And part of it is accurately 
transcribing the exchanged information into whatever format is required.
We are fond of claiming that contesting makes us good public service 
operators and all that back-patting we do for ourselves. Imagine we 
are relaying orders for prescription medicines needed in a disaster 
area.  Is a typo in "hydrochlorothiazide" acceptable because we were 
in a hurry?  ("Can you give me that phonetically before the band 
closes?")  Is mistakenly changing a dosage of 50 mg to 500 mg OK 
because we hit 0 twice? ("Whoa - how did that huge hairy bat get in 
here?")  Of course not...we would recognize that as an error and we 
should do so when N0AX gets changed to N0XA. Each unforced error needs 
to produce negative feedback so we will work to lower our error rate.  
The CQ WW introduction of penalties for errors was exactly the right 
remedy for sloppy operating because it provides both carrot and stick 
to operate at a rate no faster than what optimizes effective 
operating.  Nothing is error-free but a three-QSO penalty has a way of 
focusing the mind.
At any rate (so to speak), anything noted during the period of 
competition is fair game for log correction.  I would prefer in the 
long term that QSOs are submitted in real-time and verified shortly 
thereafter so that this whole notion of "log" goes away along with all 
the misbehavior and delays it engenders, but in the mean time, 
transcription into the submitted record of competition is as much a 
part of the contest as transmitting the information in the first place.
73, Ward N0AX
_______________________________________________
CQ-Contest mailing list
CQ-Contest@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/cq-contest
_______________________________________________
CQ-Contest mailing list
CQ-Contest@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/cq-contest

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>