MakeItHappen 15 #1 December 13, 2005 PROTOTYPE Team Training Tool lemme know what you think....... yea ------- nay------- .. Make It Happen Parachute History DiveMaker Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
chunkybunky 0 #2 December 13, 2005 I Like it. Makes scoring & timing a dive very easy. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bodypilot1 0 #3 December 13, 2005 If it works for Bozos, it will work for anyone. Be safe Edwww.WestCoastWingsuits.com www.PrecisionSkydiving.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
darkwing 5 #4 December 14, 2005 I'm a tool, and I've trained teams. Does that count? -- Jeff My Skydiving History Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
piisfish 140 #5 December 14, 2005 that's cool.. will try and use it next season ...scissors beat paper, paper beat rock, rock beat wingsuit - KarlM Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
UDSkyJunkie 0 #6 January 6, 2006 Very cool! I've been wanting to get data like this for my team, particularly block inter times, but it's a huge pain in the ass. This makes it prettymuch effortless. I bow to your computer programming skills... seriously, I've already added it to my favorites."Some people follow their dreams, others hunt them down and beat them mercilessly into submission." Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
UKFSChick 0 #7 January 7, 2006 This is fantastic...thanks Jan. I'll pass the url on. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ron 10 #8 January 9, 2006 Jan, this is one of the best tools I have seen. If it could import into XL it would be nice...But really great work and thanks. Also, just let me say thanks for all you do..you do quite a bit and all the work you do makes skydiving better. Ron"No free man shall ever be debarred the use of arms." -- Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson Papers, 334 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
vibeke 0 #9 January 9, 2006 Very cool. I already send the URL to several. This is going to be usefull for a lot of teams. Thank you - and please do keep up the good work _________________________________________________________ Your success and happiness, is in direct proportions to your commitment to excellence, regardless of your chosen field of endeavour. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
MakeItHappen 15 #10 January 20, 2006 Thanks everyone, especially Ron. I'll add in something for you to save the data locally, hopefully before the season picks up in the north. .. Make It Happen Parachute History DiveMaker Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bliston 0 #11 January 21, 2006 I agree that it rocks. If you could figure out a clean way to log the data, it would be awsome! Something were best, worst, and average block times could be saved by date or jump number - so teams could track progress over time without having to manually enter data into an excel sheet after each jump. Thanks for the efforts - even as is, it's great. BenMass Defiance 4-wayFS website sticks! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
MakeItHappen 15 #12 March 31, 2006 Team Training Scoring Tool I made a few updates, so that you could save the data to excel. I have other plans on how to make this better, but this allows you to track scores now. .. Make It Happen Parachute History DiveMaker Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
pr0ject42 0 #13 April 1, 2006 WERD!! Now to just write a post-processing script to warehouse the data... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
fsjumperuk 0 #14 April 3, 2006 ANY CHANCE IT CAN BE USED OFFLINE? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
MakeItHappen 15 #15 April 4, 2006 QuoteANY CHANCE IT CAN BE USED OFFLINE? Without going into the details, I feel that within 5 years virtually every DZ in the world will have high speed, wireless internet access available. Whether a DZ chooses to support that will be based upon customer base. But the remote internet technology will be available. There are DZs today that have this technology available to them, but have not tapped into it. The person to talk to is the DZO. From my developer POV, it makes more sense to develop for an expanding audience, rather than a shrinking market (ie Windoze users) If I write a Windoze program, I loose the Mac/Linux and whatever OS system in the future users. I realize that some teams might want this information RIGHT NOW and can't wait until Sunday night. I think most teams concentrate on the jumps, not the data while they are at the DZ. Maybe, that's not right? I think that the weekdays are when a team can look at the data and adjust the next weekend's practice based on the data. The data that will be available, once I implement all the fancy slicing and dicing and graphics, will be better used to plan the next weekend of jumps as opposed to your next jump that day. There are many other reasons I have to keep this web-based, but from a team's perspective, those are the most relevant reasons. There is also the customer base for this. It is a TINY market. I only have a handful of emails from people interested in this. I put out a prototype, but I have not seen a huge demand for this. I have got great feedback from people interested in it, but not enough people. So if you are a lurker and want this to continue, please email me. .. Make It Happen Parachute History DiveMaker Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rehmwa 2 #16 April 4, 2006 Quote So if you are a lurker and want this to continue, please email me. Jan - As someone who's always playing around and making tools for 4-way myself: I think it's very cool. ... Driving is a one dimensional activity - a monkey can do it - being proud of your driving abilities is like being proud of being able to put on pants Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
pr0ject42 0 #17 April 4, 2006 I think you're spot on with the online thing. If you're editing video and compiling your stats, chances are you've got a decent internet connection as well. My team used our stats as a planning tool, not as a real-time evaluation. While in a camp, you shouldn't be thinking about specific numbers (in my rookie opinion) and more focused on visual quality of what is working. Dood, I apprecaite your continued development, I think the CSV step was a good one and I think if you just added sessioning with a login for a team and MySQL support on the back end, you could possible charch a subscription for a season. Good job, please keep it up when you've got the time! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bob.dino 1 #18 April 5, 2006 QuoteI think it's very cool. Seconded. It rocks. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
UKFSChick 0 #19 April 10, 2006 Just to let you know, we have been using it with our coach and he loves it, he plans to use it with all the many teams he coaches. Nice one :o) Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rehmwa 2 #20 July 18, 2006 Jan - We've been using it and taking our results and comparing to top teams (to see how we do relative to the entitlement that's out there). It's allowing us to truly identify those areas that have the best 'bang for the buck' from training. (Turns out, typical slow blocks we do very well, so not a lot of tenths to earn there compared to the pros - the medium speed blocks are our best source for faster times. And always random work, especially into and out of blocks) it's great information. It's fantastic. Raw scoring, etc is interesting, but the best info is the breakdown in inters (by block, and by types of random transitions) ... Driving is a one dimensional activity - a monkey can do it - being proud of your driving abilities is like being proud of being able to put on pants Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
MakeItHappen 15 #21 July 24, 2006 QuoteJan - We've been using it and taking our results and comparing to top teams (to see how we do relative to the entitlement that's out there). It's allowing us to truly identify those areas that have the best 'bang for the buck' from training. (Turns out, typical slow blocks we do very well, so not a lot of tenths to earn there compared to the pros - the medium speed blocks are our best source for faster times. And always random work, especially into and out of blocks) it's great information. It's fantastic. Raw scoring, etc is interesting, but the best info is the breakdown in inters (by block, and by types of random transitions) Thanks. I'm glad people are using it. I have the backend requirements written and the DB schema planned out. Now, to find the time to implement it. It'll happen in two stages. One to just save all the data and the second to extract data and create graphs. I don't want to give away the feature set yet, but it'll have cool stuff. Also busts will be another key press. .. Make It Happen Parachute History DiveMaker Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rehmwa 2 #22 July 24, 2006 What would nicer in the output page is a format that directly cuts and pastes into a format like the following: Here's my column headings for example 1 - time see first point 2 - random time (between the 16 randoms) 3 - random time into blocks 4 - random time out of blocks 5 - inter time block 1 6 - inter time block 2 . . . . - inter time block 22 each of these are different animals - right now, I do have to hand enter the data from your summary page into a spread sheet (or, take the chunk from each cell, decode into columns, then transpose it and put it into the spreadsheet.) I wonder if there's a more friendly format. Here's a picture of a sample page of a typical format for using and summarizing and comparing the info I get from your tool: I'm using it to see where we need the most work so we can focus on areas that drive improvement. Unfortunately, it's indicating all areas. Once I enter that data, our July data will show a huge improvement in our areas to work. (but, we did break the double digit barrier for a full comp this last weekend in AAA, and I think good record keeping has helped a ton in our training). I also don't include scores for all randoms in the score column, it unfairly inflates the scores up (we have mostly 18's to 22's there and they don't help give a realistic view of the team's real progress.) Since you provide pure raw data, it's important for teams to look at it in a statistically rigorous manner and separate very slow block times from unusual events that have different causes - good analysis requires an understanding of how to treat anomolous data from true distribution. In other words, your data is perfect for treating both continuous team improvement AS WELL AS trouble shooting special causes. ... Driving is a one dimensional activity - a monkey can do it - being proud of your driving abilities is like being proud of being able to put on pants Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
pr0ject42 0 #23 July 24, 2006 To get the actual score, all you have to do is look at the time column while your program is parsing through and at the first time your time colum is > 35, your point score is one less than the point count of that column. Yay, your 35 second score. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rehmwa 2 #24 July 24, 2006 The sky is blue. {{I think the 'score' is the absolute least useful bit of info this tool provides. When used correctly. My notes about scores specifically, is how to use the data you are talking about in the assessment of team performance - but that actual bit of data is really the least important part you get from the summary jan provides. The actual breakdowns of the transition information is the real wealth of her output. You can't focus your training on the 'score' metric to make improvements, you focus your training on those moves that need work - Jan's data can tell you which blocks you need to focus on, how well your random work is going, etc. It's so much more powerful than just looking at only the numjber of points by 35 seconds...... In otherwords, I don't care if I score a 6 or a 14 or a 22 on three different dives. But I'm very interested that my inter time on block 18 has improved from 7.5 seconds to 5.5 seconds in the last 2 practices and that I can still likely get that down to 4.5 seconds before working on a different block. The Airspeed articles include a couple about record keeping and goal setting. How do you know what a reasonable goal is unless you know what you are doing now (baseline) and what the best possible done is (potential). I think that's why it's called a 'training tool', not a 'scoring tool'}} But yes, it would be very useful for judging at meets too. But I think Tim and Ted already have that covered. ... Driving is a one dimensional activity - a monkey can do it - being proud of your driving abilities is like being proud of being able to put on pants Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
GQ_jumper 4 #25 July 24, 2006 But I think Tim and Ted already have that covered.Quote Look at some of the tidbits from the older WM's and those guys had it broken down to exactly which blocks won or lost the meet. It's really neat to get that kind of detail.History does not long entrust the care of freedom to the weak or the timid. --Dwight D. Eisenhower Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites Prev 1 2 Next Page 1 of 2 Join the conversation You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account. Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible. Reply to this topic... × Pasted as rich text. Paste as plain text instead Only 75 emoji are allowed. × Your link has been automatically embedded. Display as a link instead × Your previous content has been restored. Clear editor × You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL. Insert image from URL × Desktop Tablet Phone Submit Reply 0