I challenge you to explain trick 6 Gib can't count
#2
Posted 2020-September-17, 13:31
#3
Posted 2020-September-17, 18:21
dwar0123, on 2020-September-17, 13:08, said:
I've started a special thread for these hands: https://www.bridgeba...06#entry1007106
Did you know that sometimes Steve Jobs would man the help desk at Apple and some lucky customer would get a free replacement laptop when they called with a problem? Perhaps BBO has the same deal.
#5
Posted 2020-September-17, 22:06
pilowsky, on 2020-September-17, 18:21, said:
Maybe not as good a deal as Jobs, but if you pony up another entry fee, BBO will let you play another tournament with the same GIBs as the previous tournament.
#7
Posted 2020-September-27, 11:48
#8
Posted 2020-September-27, 20:23
wbartley, on 2020-September-27, 11:48, said:
Out of interest, on your scale of 0-100, how good a programmer would they have to be? Would you be able to tell? I'm sure BBO would like to know so that they can work out which of their programmers are up to snuff - according to the 'Bartley' scale.
#9
Posted 2020-September-28, 08:34
#10
Posted 2020-September-28, 09:48
- if there are several cards that lead to the same result, it doesn't matter which one is played;
- declarer is going to guess everything perfectly is a part of deciding 'there are several cards that lead to the same result'; and
- you are also going to play perfectly, after having seen partner's card.
Those people who think that the play should be another morass of rules can write one. Good luck. After you finish that, write a good definition of "convention" that everyone will agree covers everything.
#11
Posted 2020-September-29, 16:30
I'm well aware that there can be extenuating circumstances that make a particular play seem wrong when it isn't, given the way GIB decides which card to play, but, did you look at the play in question? If I were a programmer working for BBO and I saw this, I would take a very long look at how that play was arrived at. Given that the point range and distribution of the South hand is pretty well bounded, it's hard to imagine that any random distribution of the unknown cards matching what is "known" about declarer's hand would produce the same double dummy result from ducking versus playing the ace.
#12
Posted 2020-September-29, 18:47
wbartley, on 2020-September-29, 16:30, said:
If you want to go one step further on 'hard to imagine' - where you could always conjure up a reason that GIB miraculously simulated the only hands where its play made no difference - here's an example from 3.5 years ago where GIB made a literal 0% play, where any simulation of >= 1 hand would guarantee a better line.
The programmers just don't seem to be capable of looking at or adjusting the play code.
#13
Posted 2020-September-30, 01:04
smerriman, on 2020-September-29, 18:47, said:
That programmers don't have the knowledge and/or skill to make major changes in the play code has been acknowledged by BBO many times over the years. It's not a secret. My guess is that there is a bunch of spaghetti code that is condensed and complex that is tied in with lots of other spaghetti code that is more condensed and complex and that a change in one part of the code may adversely decisions in yet another part of the code. So rather than get into an endless cycle of patch, create errors, patch again, create more errors, continue looping, BBO has decided to live with the way things are currently programmed.