lycier, on 2016-May-05, 04:02, said:
But I am unwilling to do such, No,No,No.
Lycier, it's OK to have contrary opinions. But the issue people have with you is in the manner in which you object. You are always posting a lot of irrelevant stuff thinking you are defending GIB but in reality you are not adding anything constructive to the discussion.
People post auctions where they think GIB did something clearly wrong. Where GIB makes a bid at some point in the auction where no good expert human player would make the same bid. Usually because one bid or another in the auction is defined poorly, or another bid would be more effective and should be higher priority, or something of that nature. We want a particular bid description altered, so that GIB will choose something else, or the priority of one bid adjusted higher than another, etc. The hope is that if this is fixed, if GIB has same auction in the future, it will have better choices available and bid more effectively. In cases like this, if you think the post is wrong, then you should not simply say stuff like "pity you are great wrong". That's really not constructive, and also can be construed as an insult to the human poster. Humans can be harsh when talking about GIB because machine does not have feelings to be spared. We are criticizing the bid, these are bugs, it is not intended as insult to the programmers (at least in most cases these days, in the past some posters here have I thought been overly critical of the programmers themselves, had unrealistic expectations, and in those cases I tried to defend the programmers). With human should try to be more diplomatic, and also be specific about what you find wrong about the argument. Like we say one particular bid should have altered definition, range different, or distribution different, or both, if you think we are wrong, you should say what definition you think it should be instead, or that you agree with GIB interpretation and choice, and give *bridge* reasons why. You aren't doing that, instead you are posting irrelevant stuff, so that's why we get upset with you.
You have a habit of posting all the times the board were played, where the auction was *different*. Where human bid something else, causing auction by GIB to be different. These are *irrelevant* to the discussion at hand. Looking at these other auctions do not contribute *any data at all* to whether the bid(s) on the poster's auction are bugs or not. The other auctions may reveal *other bugs*, but really they belong in separate threads, as they are *separate issues*, even though they arose from the same deal of four hands. We are trying to answer questions:
- what should bids mean, *given a particular start to the auction*
- with this hand *given a certain start to the auction*, what do you bid now?
Because this is all the data GIB ever has when choosing how to bid. It has no idea what went on at other tables. The other tables are irrelevant to the decision making process.
When you have a different start to the auction, this makes the questions *different questions*. It is as if we are discussing what the answers to questions #7 and #8 should be on a test, and then you start discussing questions #11 and #12 instead. #11/#12 might be interesting questions in their own right, and maybe related in some way, but really they should be separate discussions. When the start of the auction is different, the choices GIB have are different, it is different section of the rule database, and the information GIB has about the other hands is different. What GIB does on different auctions shouldn't affect what the choices should be on this auction.
Just because we think GIB does badly on a particular auction does not mean we think GIB is hopeless in general. We are just trying to make it better. Say you have a top student in mathematics class. He takes exam, gets 49/50 correct, top score in class. Does teacher ignore the one mistake, not mark it, not let student know he got it wrong? No, he marks it so that the student can learn and improve. We are posting bugs so that GIB can improve. We don't need to post hand where GIB does well, because GIB is not human, it does not need positive feedback so that it feels good about itself. If it was a human child we would praise when it does well, but machine don't need this kind of encouragement.
I will now take a look at your previous post in the thread and show where you are going wrong ... Maybe you will then understand better how to more constructively post in the future.