englanddg
One Little Spark...
Oh, well, my bad! (hides in a corner ashamed for using the incorrect pronoun) <grin>Right. But I think that's a "she," at least according to her profile.
Oh, well, my bad! (hides in a corner ashamed for using the incorrect pronoun) <grin>Right. But I think that's a "she," at least according to her profile.
And this may sound so small of a suggestion, but instead of having the acronym ICS be the title of a thread, perhaps expand it out for the full name so new people know what it stands for in the thread title.He is actually a poster boy for the system being as simple as possible...as he is new and can give unvarnished opinions about what HE thinks is too complex.
In my mind, if it can't be understood after reading a post or two in a FAQ, it is too complex. And I think we use that as a razor of sorts to keep us from more complex ideas.
Way to understand a community and therefore feel qualified to comment upon it.And this may sound so small of a suggestion, but instead of having the acronym ICS be the title of a thread, perhaps expand it out for the full name so new people know what it stands for in the thread title.
I will he honest I skipped over the ICS sticky thread in the beginning because it was just an acronym.
I think having maybe one round of teams is good, as part of determining the "best" could be arguably who can work well together. Though not too many rounds.I think we should limit it to 16 people. I think that allows enough people to play without too many feeling left out. Also...If the contest started the last week of November it could be stretched out for four rounds.
With that the rounds would look like this:
Round 1 - Compete in 4 groups of 4. Two people from each group moves on.
Round 2 - Compete in 2 groups of 4. Two people from each group moves on.
Round 3 - Final 4 proposals are judged. Two people move on.
Round 4 - Final 2 proposals are judge, with one winner.
I really like this idea! But the thing is, if it's a commitment bonus, we don't necessarily know that the person eliminated first would have stayed committed two or three weeks into it.Can we tentatively plan to do the Sweet Sixteen comp next year in December? This year we can still stick with the Elite Eight, if no one objects. Better to finish what we started than scrap it all halfway through.
The other thing that needs to be decided is the point system. I heard this a few pages back, which sounds eerily similar to the system we've been using, but simpler than the one we planned to use for next year:
I think we could also add something based on the timeframe of the competition. For instance, competitors would receive 2 points for each month of the competition. This would not be based on how you rank in the comp-- it's solely a commitment bonus. For instance, someone eliminated in the first week of a 3 month comp would still receive 6 points.
- Competitors: 1 point for each person you beat
- Hosts: 1/2 point for each contestant in the competition
- Co-Judges/Co-Hosts: 1/4 point for each contestant in the competition
- Winner gets 2 extra points.
For example, these are the people who have already indicated they want to host next year.
RM wants TSI - 12 weeks
IDI (and I assume space is back for another ride) wants his comp - 12 weeks
JDM wants his comp - 12 weeks
Sam and I want to do 30 Days - 4 - 6 weeks
One slot should go to SYWTBAI for Tiki - 12+ weeks
Some sort of finisher (Elite 8 / Sweet 16) 5 - 8 weeks
Matt may want to do his comp again - 10-12 weeks
And, I may be forgetting someone, and that doesnt include anyone who may have their own ideas but havent come forward yet.
Do the math...not enough time.
Hence the idea of "Tiers" so some comps could slightly overlap (or completely overlap in the case of a smaller one like 30 days)
Honestly, I see no reason why we can't have 2 bigger comps running at the same time. If you don't want to juggle both comps along with other work (especially during school time), then you can join one or the other.So I had a question for potential competition hosts next season based on this post yesterday that I took an interest to.
We have all be talking about having no schedule and just letting people do their own thing. I'm in favor of that, but one thing I was considering was feasibility
I wanted to ask potential hosts if they had any ideas as to how everyone listed above could run a comp next season without becoming oversaturated and without burning out contestants.
There's only 52 weeks in a year and based on the schedule above, there's much overlap.
I had two suggestions. First would be to start comps once a decent amount of contestants from the previous comps have been eliminated. Second would potentially be to shorten some comps from 12 weeks to 10 weeks or so.
Just looking to have a conversation about this because if this is the direction we are heading in, we should be prepared.
I think the bigger thing is how we can get more people involved in the community... If we have a lot of members that want to join in the comps, then it would be easier to hold multiple at the same time, as there would be plenty of people to join them. That's part of what the Twitter was supposed to do but I don't know how much it helped yetSo I had a question for potential competition hosts next season based on this post yesterday that I took an interest to.
We have all be talking about having no schedule and just letting people do their own thing. I'm in favor of that, but one thing I was considering was feasibility
I wanted to ask potential hosts if they had any ideas as to how everyone listed above could run a comp next season without becoming oversaturated and without burning out contestants.
There's only 52 weeks in a year and based on the schedule above, there's much overlap.
I had two suggestions. First would be to start comps once a decent amount of contestants from the previous comps have been eliminated. Second would potentially be to shorten some comps from 12 weeks to 10 weeks or so.
Just looking to have a conversation about this because if this is the direction we are heading in, we should be prepared.
The only problem I might see with that is not having enough people to partake in them.Honestly, I see no reason why we can't have 2 bigger comps running at the same time. If you don't want to juggle both comps along with other work (especially during school time), then you can join one or the other.
I think if you're looking for advertising you might as well look internally in the forums. A lot of stories of people joining the imagineer forums were basically from joining the site, then falling upon this.I think the bigger thing is how we can get more people involved in the community... If we have a lot of members that want to join in the comps, then it would be easier to hold multiple at the same time, as there would be plenty of people to join them. That's part of what the Twitter was supposed to do but I don't know how much it helped yet
But for now I'd say wait until more people were eliminated to host comps. Because shortening them can really take away from some of the comps.
The problem is people have trouble juggling one comp with work.Honestly, I see no reason why we can't have 2 bigger comps running at the same time. If you don't want to juggle both comps along with other work (especially during school time), then you can join one or the other.
The 4 "groups" in Sam's idea weren't teams. They were like a bracket group, competing against each other.Also, how would having two people from each team move on work? Isn't the point that one of them wins? Otherwise eliminations would have to be more boardroom style (which takes up time)
But why would however many comps there are going on make a difference?The problem is people have trouble juggling one comp with work.
Oh, ok. Does each group have a different challenge then or something like that? What makes each group different than just all in one bracket I guess I'm wondering.The 4 "groups" in Sam's idea weren't teams. They were like a bracket group, competing against each other.
They'd have the same challenge. It's just like the groups of 2 people that competed against each other last year.Oh, ok. Does each group have a different challenge then or something like that? What makes each group different than just all in one bracket I guess I'm wondering.
I'm confused thenThey'd have the same challenge. It's just like the groups of 2 people that competed against each other last year.
To be honest, shortening my competition from 15 weeks (like this year) to 12 weeks while trying to plan something has been extremely difficult. If I had to cut it down another 2 weeks, I'd be in hot water. At this point, I plan on TSI S2 being 12 weeks (maybe 13 if something happens).I had two suggestions. First would be to start comps once a decent amount of contestants from the previous comps have been eliminated. Second would potentially be to shorten some comps from 12 weeks to 10 weeks or so.
But nothings stopping you from hosting at the same time as someone else, so I don't think that'll work. If I say that I'm going to host a competition in August 2017 right now, then everyone will know that I want it. Come February 2016 if someone else "calls" that spot, I could still use it because we can overlap.By the way, I feel that with this new method, people will be "calling" times to host their comps a year or two in advance. In a way, that's fine, but I'd say that you can only "call" a time 6 months ahead (at the absolute earliest) of the start date of your competition.
That's true. I was just trying to think of a solution to a problem that we had before all of this scheduling stuff.But nothings stopping you from hosting at the same time as someone else, so I don't think that'll work. If I say that I'm going to host a competition in August 2017 right now, then everyone will know that I want it. Come February 2016 if someone else "calls" that spot, I could still use it because we can overlap.
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