barmar, on 2012-February-06, 10:00, said:
If you only play with one partner, then why do you care what your rating is?
If ratings were meaningful then it would be much more common for a table to be "Advanced only" or whatever. It is common enough even now when ratings are close to meaningless. If a pair are in truth Expert but the "meaningful" rating system marks them as Beginner then they would be excluded from such tables.
Obviously I was using some overly extreme examples in my post to make a point. But the truth is that many many systems are popular in different parts of the world and it would be close to impossible to create a meaningful test that would apply to every such system.
Wayne_LV, on 2012-February-06, 11:03, said:
The purpose of a rating system is to find a temporary or pick up partner for a casual game, not to find a lifetime partner to play an exotic system with a gaggle of obscure conventions.
Is that the only purpose? Do you not think some players would like to use a rating system to find opponents of roughly their level (or better)?
Wayne_LV, on 2012-February-06, 11:03, said:
A bridge quiz should cover basic bridge knowledge that applies to all systems.
Could you name some basic bridge knowledge that applies to ALL systems?
Wayne_LV, on 2012-February-06, 11:03, said:
Specific bidding questions could be limited to ACBL SAYC, which after all was intended to allow strangers to sit and play with NO discussion. Funny how so few seem to know the basics of SAYC yet expect partner to play Exclusion Blackwood, lebensohl, and other complex conventions.
It is quite true that very few know SAYC well. The truth is that I have very little idea about the details of SAYC whatsoever because I am not American. English Acol is also a system where players sit down without discussion. I believe Polish Clubbers do this too. Similarly SEF, Forum D, Swiss Acol, Benji Acol, even Precision. Such American-centric views are really quite distasteful to me for an international system such as BBO.
Wayne_LV, on 2012-February-06, 11:03, said:
The play of the hand and basic defensive techniques are system independant for the most part.
Agreed. That does not mean that standard carding methods are not different in other parts of the world. Or do you plan on only allowing carding agreements common in the ACBL in your test too?
barmar, on 2012-February-06, 19:42, said:
A common situation when people play pick-up games is that they put "Expert" in their profile, and then go down due to a dumb mistake, and their partner, who was expecting better declarer expertise, says something to the effect of "You call yourself an expert?" and leaves the table.
Or perhaps the Expert really was an Expert and played for a specific layout that was suggested by the bidding/carding but turned out not to be the case. In my experience, the fact that Dummy can see all 4 hands tends to colour their view of how a hand should be played. I also think that the software should be changed that the player that was Dummy when the play started should keep the score even if they leave the table thereafter - I have lost count of the number of times Dummy left the table to avoid a bad score, often after their extremely poor bidding caused their side to reach a ridiculous contract. This would help my own rating system which is to simply check the last month's hand records for a given player. The combination of self-rating and actual rating is often a decent guide to how to handle a given partner!