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Moneybridge vs. GIB Why...?

#1 User is offline   basy 

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Posted 2009-June-16, 01:21

Does anyone know what is the point in NOT switching declarers when GIB becomes the declarer in a contract? I could play more for my money, I could blame myself for losing my money and GIB's bidding is a stress enough to handle now it is topped with a much more often than one likes abysmal declarer play.

There must be a point for all this suffering but I fail to see it...
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#2 User is offline   jdonn 

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Posted 2009-June-16, 03:30

I apologize on behalf of bbo for all of your suffering.
Please let me know about any questions or interest or bug reports about GIB.
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#3 User is offline   Gerben42 

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Posted 2009-June-16, 06:14

It's the same for everyone. If you are losing money, there's unfortunately no one else to blame...

BTW, I don't think GIB's declarer play is worse than that of the average club player. Now if you were expecting a World Class expert, that program does not yet exist (if you don't count Deep Finesse, which sees all the cards).
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#4 User is offline   TimG 

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Posted 2009-June-16, 06:17

Gerben42, on Jun 16 2009, 07:14 AM, said:

BTW, I don't think GIB's declarer play is worse than that of the average club player.

But on a par with self-proclaimed BBO experts.
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#5 User is offline   basy 

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Posted 2009-June-16, 06:25

I'll live. Why dont You just switch those declarers instead? Or anyone...
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#6 User is offline   basy 

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Posted 2009-June-16, 06:37

Certainly anyone can play a hand worse than GIB but then you can only blame yourself and certainly GIB has the same chance for screwing up a board for anyone. This is not the qeustion.

The question is if I am paying for every deal (5 cents) why GIB gets the fun? And why can't we match our declarer play with my human opponent more often? I dont see any purpose for GIB declaring. So I can watch him play?! Well, that is no fun at all, I guarantee. Especially when it is loosing my money at the same time.

I wish someone from BBO would explain this unexplainable.
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#7 User is offline   H_KARLUK 

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Posted 2009-June-16, 06:42

jdonn, on Jun 16 2009, 05:30 AM, said:

I apologize on behalf of bbo for all of your suffering.

On behalf of bbo ?
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#8 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2009-June-16, 06:48

Agree with basy. When I play with Jack, I can chose whether I get to declare "his" boards. I think that's a nice option.
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#9 User is offline   basy 

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Posted 2009-June-16, 07:03

Yeah, by the way, what would BBO guys say if at home, playing offline with 3 GIBs they couldnt be declarer instead of GIB? They would be upset I think. In spite of GIB not losing their money...
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#10 User is offline   Beto 

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Posted 2009-June-16, 07:15

basy, on Jun 16 2009, 10:37 AM, said:

And why can't we match our declarer play with my human opponent more often?

Totally agree. If you are playing bridge for money against only one human, you should have as many chances as you can to prove who deserves to get the money. There is no sense wasting time while the GIBs are playing the hand.
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#11 User is offline   uday 

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Posted 2009-June-16, 07:42

We want to have the human declare the hands. There are technical hurdles we have not clambered over ( but we will one of these days ).

U
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#12 User is offline   pdmunro 

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Posted 2009-June-16, 07:56

helene_t, on Jun 16 2009, 07:48 AM, said:

Agree with basy. When I play with Jack, I can chose whether I get to declare "his" boards. I think that's a nice option.

If this happens, I prefer that the hands (and bidding) don't rotate. For some reason my brain gets confused if the hands rotate. If I am taking the computer's place as declarer, I prefer to now sit North (computer's seat) and declare the hand. This is how I configure Bridge Baron.
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#13 User is offline   hanp 

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Posted 2009-June-16, 08:34

GIB E said:

We want to have the human declare the hands. 


GIB N said:

Please no, he plays worse than the average club player! Prrt Prrt, Technical difficulties, Prrrt.

and the result can be plotted on a graph.
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#14 User is offline   jdonn 

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Posted 2009-June-16, 08:50

H_KARLUK, on Jun 16 2009, 07:42 AM, said:

jdonn, on Jun 16 2009, 05:30 AM, said:

I apologize on behalf of bbo for all of your suffering.

On behalf of bbo ?

Sorry, on behalf of h_karluk as well.
Please let me know about any questions or interest or bug reports about GIB.
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#15 User is offline   Rain 

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Posted 2009-June-16, 12:03

I always want GIB to declare my hands. He plays better ; )
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#16 User is offline   Free 

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Posted 2009-June-16, 13:58

uday, on Jun 16 2009, 02:42 PM, said:

We want to have the human declare the hands. There are technical hurdles we have not clambered over ( but we will one of these days ).

U

I agree that the human should be declarer. I hope you'll be able to fix it.

There is another (bigger imo) issue. I haven't played much lately but I think this "problem" still exists. Sometimes you're EW, and the next board you're NS, and a few boards later you're EW again,...

The problems I've encountered with switching sides are the following:
- Opps are VUL more often than you are. If they make game they get 600 total points, but if you make game you only get 400.
In a perfect world where everyone has the same amount of game scores, you'll lose huge.
- Opps get a lot more HCP (which usually results in more total points and money). I know I've done calculations in the past, and HCP NS vs HCP EW were about equal. However, if you switch sides now and then, your opps can get way more HCP than average.
Suppose you distribute HCP NS-EW every round as follows: 25-15, 15-25, 25-15,... In the long run, NS and EW will have the same amount of HCP. However, if you also switch sides every round, then your team may get 15HCP on average, while opps get 25 on average!

Note that most of the time I don't play more than 10 boards, so there's no real "long run". I don't know how many boards other people play on average.
I realize that both problems have played in my advantage too, but it's a luck factor we don't need imo.
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#17 User is offline   eyhung 

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Posted 2009-June-17, 17:33

This is flawed thinking. If you switch sides, you are no less likely to average 20 HCP in the long run than if you stay there. Each hand is completely independent from the previous one, so on each hand you have an equally likely chance of getting more HCP than the opponents. It matters not whether you are sitting N/S or E/W. Sure, it's possible that the HCP could be 25-15, 15-25, 25-15 and it's possible to get the worst possible set. But it's equally likely for the HCP to be 25-15, 25-15, 25-15, and now staying in place at E/W makes you "lose". In the long run, it really doesn't matter WHERE you sit -- you'll get bad runs, you'll get good runs, and you'll average 20 HCP.

Similarly, if the side-switching is truly random, it does not make you more or less likely to be vulnerable before the cards are dealt. As long as the switching is truly random rather than deterministic, the vulnerabilities should average out in the long run.
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#18 User is offline   jdonn 

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Posted 2009-June-17, 18:40

Free, on Jun 16 2009, 02:58 PM, said:

- Opps get a lot more HCP (which usually results in more total points and money).  I know I've done calculations in the past, and HCP NS vs HCP EW were about equal.  However, if you switch sides now and then, your opps can get way more HCP than average.

Sorry but this comment shows a complete and utter lack of understanding about probability and statistics of any kind. It is equivalent to the following argument.

You and I will both pick a card from each of 100 different decks and whoever picks more aces wins. However, if sometimes you pick first and sometimes I pick first then you can get way more aces than I get, which is not fair.

Do you know what "random" means?
Please let me know about any questions or interest or bug reports about GIB.
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#19 User is offline   Lobowolf 

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Posted 2009-June-17, 18:49

Wish I could remember the story and source completely accurately, but my recollection is that it's something to the effect that someone told Barry Crane that when faced with a pure 2-way guess for a queen, he did it differently depending on whether a certain card was in dummy, or in his hand, or something, and wanted Crane's validation. Crane told him it didn't matter as long as he did it the same way each time. As I recall, neither the anecdote nor Crane's comment was presented as being ironic. I'll try to find the excerpt and reference it.

It's like thinking that the long-term expectation on a coin flip depends on picking the same choice every time. Bizarre.
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#20 User is offline   jdonn 

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Posted 2009-June-17, 19:20

Lobowolf, on Jun 17 2009, 07:49 PM, said:

Wish I could remember the story and source completely accurately, but my recollection is that it's something to the effect that someone told Barry Crane that when faced with a pure 2-way guess for a queen, he did it differently depending on whether a certain card was in dummy, or in his hand, or something, and wanted Crane's validation. Crane told him it didn't matter as long as he did it the same way each time. As I recall, neither the anecdote nor Crane's comment was presented as being ironic. I'll try to find the excerpt and reference it.

It's like thinking that the long-term expectation on a coin flip depends on picking the same choice every time. Bizarre.

I think his point is when it's a pure 2-way guess then you are only wasting brain cells to torture yourself over which way to guess, so by doing the same thing every time you can save a lot of stress and thought.

It's like being told that the long term expectation for a coin flip is the exact same no matter what you pick, so you can save the most thought for yourself by just picking the same thing every time.
Please let me know about any questions or interest or bug reports about GIB.
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