auto play singletons changing bbo default settings
#1
Posted 2021-February-28, 12:41
#2
Posted 2021-February-28, 14:33
#3
Posted 2021-February-28, 14:47
#4
Posted 2021-February-28, 15:27
#5
Posted 2021-February-28, 15:44
You now have no way of knowing what cards were played to the previous trick.
In fact, I take back my earlier statement. I have no idea how anyone could want this enabled.
#6
Posted 2021-February-28, 16:13
The tempo (in this case, random) should be hidden as far as possible by the system, as it should be with manual bids too.
The system should offer additional time protection on the first trick.
#7
Posted 2021-February-28, 16:22
Say at trick 6 I have a JT8 in a non-trump suit and signalling is not relevant. I will play whichever of the JT my cursor arrives at first.
The robots do the same thing. Against good players (better than me) this will make it hard for declarer to use 'restricted choice' to work out where the remaining cards are.
By the same token, I now also randomise tempo (slightly). Sometimes I will play a card quickly - sometimes more slowly - this is intended to prevent opponents from 'imagining' which cards I hold on the basis of timing.
More problematic in face-to-face bridge is that some people always arrange the cards in their hand in a particular way. This made it possible to work out the opponents holding from where in the hand they selected their next card.
This is one reason I much prefer online Bridge.
Turning on autoplay singletons is handy in 'robot race' where you really want to play quickly, It creates all sorts of problems in non-robot Bridge.
Oddly, I seem to recall that 'on' was a default in earlier iterations of BBO, but that was a while back so I may have misremembered.
#8
Posted 2021-February-28, 22:01
TylerE, on 2021-February-28, 14:33, said:
As a (now retired) director, I had the option of penalising people who deliberately took excessive time playing a singleton for unsportsmanlike behaviour. I never did it but the option was there.
I find that there is some variation in how quickly singletons autoplay. If you naturally play much faster or much slower than the autoplay, you may be giving away a lot more UI by even a slight deviation from your normal playing speed than Autoplay Singleton ever does.
If you have a connection so good that the timing of AS is always detectable then I envy you.
#9
Posted 2021-February-28, 22:11
Once that's done, it makes more sense to have AS on as a default than to have those bloody Vugraph popups appearing at the moments when they're most concentration-shattering.
While we're at it, Confirm Bids should default to on. If there's one setting that should be an opt-out rather than an opt-in it's CB.
#10
Posted 2021-February-28, 22:32
morecharac, on 2021-February-28, 22:11, said:
Once that's done, it makes more sense to have AS on as a default than to have those bloody Vugraph popups appearing at the moments when they're most concentration-shattering.
To say nothing of the purulent "the Director has adjusted board..." etc
#11
Posted 2021-March-01, 08:04
That is cheating, of course.
#12
Posted 2021-March-01, 10:20
I once got an opponent upset with me for doing that, because it's not fair in other games. Yes, well, I can see in Poker or Gin Rummy there would be a problem, but people will notice the second Ace of spades when all 52 cards are in play.
For a couple of years my regular partner played with a rack, and sorted by suits. Several times, concerned opponents, usually very good players, would comment on it, and warn her that some opponents (not them, of course) would use that information. I'm pretty certain that not all of them were entirely transparent about their concern - I'm quite certain that in some cases, what was actually being said was "your partner could use that information", and it was more a warning to me than a concern for her. Fine - I learned not to look at partner 30 years ago when I had that one, very distracting and unavailable, partner.
Count me in, too, for Autoplay Trick 13.
#13
Posted 2021-March-01, 10:53
mycroft, on 2021-March-01, 10:20, said:
I once got an opponent upset with me for doing that, because it's not fair in other games. Yes, well, I can see in Poker or Gin Rummy there would be a problem, but people will notice the second Ace of spades when all 52 cards are in play.
My response has always been that the cards are too close for me to see if they're above the table.
One of the favoured players of our former club manager, a man who actually threw boards at my partner's feet once, would play with card hand resting on table and fingers already grasping the next card he expected to play, while his wife was choosing her card, then get audibly wrathful when he had to change cards.
He had the audacity to claim he didn't cheat and there were people who supported him. Usually the other people who berated their wives at the table with impunity...
#14
Posted 2021-March-01, 13:28
mycroft, on 2021-March-01, 10:20, said:
I once got an opponent upset with me for doing that, because it's not fair in other games. Yes, well, I can see in Poker or Gin Rummy there would be a problem, but people will notice the second Ace of spades when all 52 cards are in play.
But they might not notice if you swap the King and 6 of spades with companion after seeing the dummy, for instance.
Below table is not illegal as far as I can see, but FWIW I don't much like it: if you find it stressful to vary the way you sort the cards (or not sort at all) then why not just lower your hand beneath the table at the moment you select a card, for instance?
The most important thing in any case is to be consistent (no unexpected lowering/raising). but good luck demonstrating that to a lazy Director or hostile opponent.
Isn't online great?
#15
Posted 2021-March-01, 14:32
45 years ago Barry Crane mentioned at the table that players can be hard to read, but kibitzers' expressions give everything away.
Around that time I was playing against a teenager, now a world champion, being taught the game by his mother who was ethically challenged. The apple rarely falls far from the tree for he had become a "leaner" who therefore picked up more than his share of 2 way finesses. Knowing this I buried a Queen behind another card and at the appropriate time "forgot" to hold my hand back so he could peek at the suit. His reaction to losing that finesse was priceless.
I've never sorted my cards since. It has the added benefit of deterring kibitzers.
#16
Posted 2021-March-01, 14:56
One time I figured I'd see if they know what they're doing, so after playing my second-to-last card in a suit, I swapped my hand around in a similar style...
I can't play with no sorting, but I do make sure that if I play the second-to-the-end K, it's not guaranteed that I have the Ace.
#17
Posted 2021-March-01, 15:22
Joe_Old, on 2021-March-01, 14:32, said:
45 years ago Barry Crane mentioned at the table that players can be hard to read, but kibitzers' expressions give everything away.
Around that time I was playing against a teenager, now a world champion, being taught the game by his mother who was ethically challenged. The apple rarely falls far from the tree for he had become a "leaner" who therefore picked up more than his share of 2 way finesses. Knowing this I buried a Queen behind another card and at the appropriate time "forgot" to hold my hand back so he could peek at the suit. His reaction to losing that finesse was priceless.
I've never sorted my cards since. It has the added benefit of deterring kibitzers.
Story going around in 70s New Jersey: A 6:10 player had to find a queen. He leaned to his left: No queen. Just to be sure he leaned to the right: No queen.
So he shrugged and went with the odds. Lady in 4th seat opens her purse, takes out the queen, and says, "I've played you before."
#18
Posted 2021-March-01, 16:29
sfi, on 2021-February-28, 15:27, said:
I think there is a misconception here. Autoplay is not instantaneous - there is a noticeable pause before it is played. What are the odds that your partner leads and you have to hesitate over your singleton unless the only object is to confuse declarer? Second, if you can't stand the default option, then go into options and turn autoplay off.
#19
Posted 2021-March-01, 16:35
morecharac, on 2021-February-28, 22:11, said:
Once that's done, it makes more sense to have AS on as a default than to have those bloody Vugraph popups appearing at the moments when they're most concentration-shattering.
While we're at it, Confirm Bids should default to on. If there's one setting that should be an opt-out rather than an opt-in it's CB.
These are good points. I would definitely support autoplay on the last round. I suspect the software would be difficult to produce which would turn autoplay on after the first trick.
#20
Posted 2021-March-01, 16:38
Tompster, on 2021-March-01, 16:29, said:
If the delay of autoplay is detectable (as people who actually use it seem to suggest) then your argument is disingenuous: I can't turn it off for you and your partner may well be aware.
It is trivial for software developers to enable/disable autoplay only at a certain trick. Also to add random delay to autoplay bids (and manual bids for that matter).