J! archive glossary question
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J! archive glossary question
So is it just me, or is the glossary more than a bit out of date? To wit:
* The "STAY CLAM" entry has links to posts on the old, pre-2011, long-since-defunct Sony board. Should those be removed (or possibly archived if someone has them)?
* Were "Bridges's Rule", "Falk's Law", "fearful wager", "Jeeks's Rule", etc. ever actually a thing? I don't remember any of those ever coming up on the old board (although it's possible that they were long before I joined -- I honestly don't remember posting there until about 2009), and if Google is correct, none of them have ever been used here.
I also think that the glossary would benefit from some of the more contemporary terms. For instance, LTAM shows up a lot in this forum as shorthand for the "Less than a minute" warnings.
* The "STAY CLAM" entry has links to posts on the old, pre-2011, long-since-defunct Sony board. Should those be removed (or possibly archived if someone has them)?
* Were "Bridges's Rule", "Falk's Law", "fearful wager", "Jeeks's Rule", etc. ever actually a thing? I don't remember any of those ever coming up on the old board (although it's possible that they were long before I joined -- I honestly don't remember posting there until about 2009), and if Google is correct, none of them have ever been used here.
I also think that the glossary would benefit from some of the more contemporary terms. For instance, LTAM shows up a lot in this forum as shorthand for the "Less than a minute" warnings.
Re: J! archive glossary question
Bumping since this never got any discussion going.
- Rackme32
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Re: J! archive glossary question
I dunno about the others, but Stay Clam is often used currently, though often shortened to something like "I clammed" instead of "I stayed clam".
- mfc248
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Re: J! archive glossary question
Some things I've noticed that could be updated as the archivists' time permits:
The two tiebreakers in Season 35 (#8023, 2019-06-26 — 2019 Teen Tournament, semifinal 3; #8039, 2019-07-18 — second tiebreaker in regular play) are not listed in the "Tiebreaker Round" section. Additionally, the words "(and to date only)" would need to be excised from the listing of the 2018-03-01 tiebreaker.
Similarly, the Final Jeopardy! Round entry reads as though co-champions are still permitted.
On the "prizes" page, the 2020 Teachers Tournament isn't listed and the 2020 College Championship game links are all dead (there is no number after game_id= in the URLs).
On the "all seasons" page: update Season 36 end date to 2020-06-12 (still has original projected end date of 2020-07-24).
The two tiebreakers in Season 35 (#8023, 2019-06-26 — 2019 Teen Tournament, semifinal 3; #8039, 2019-07-18 — second tiebreaker in regular play) are not listed in the "Tiebreaker Round" section. Additionally, the words "(and to date only)" would need to be excised from the listing of the 2018-03-01 tiebreaker.
Similarly, the Final Jeopardy! Round entry reads as though co-champions are still permitted.
On the "prizes" page, the 2020 Teachers Tournament isn't listed and the 2020 College Championship game links are all dead (there is no number after game_id= in the URLs).
On the "all seasons" page: update Season 36 end date to 2020-06-12 (still has original projected end date of 2020-07-24).
- cinemaniax7
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Re: J! archive glossary question
You're one up on me, TPH. I use the archive fairly often, and I had no idea there WAS a glossary.TenPoundHammer wrote: ↑Tue Oct 09, 2018 12:15 am So is it just me, or is the glossary more than a bit out of date? To wit:
* The "STAY CLAM" entry has links to posts on the old, pre-2011, long-since-defunct Sony board. Should those be removed (or possibly archived if someone has them)?
* Were "Bridges's Rule", "Falk's Law", "fearful wager", "Jeeks's Rule", etc. ever actually a thing? I don't remember any of those ever coming up on the old board (although it's possible that they were long before I joined -- I honestly don't remember posting there until about 2009), and if Google is correct, none of them have ever been used here.
I also think that the glossary would benefit from some of the more contemporary terms. For instance, LTAM shows up a lot in this forum as shorthand for the "Less than a minute" warnings.
Re: J! archive glossary question
I have no doubt that "clam" is in constant use. My issue was that the description linked to forum posts on the old Sony board that were deleted nine years ago, and somehow in these nine years the links have never been corrected. I've shot Mark a PM.
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- Robert K S
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Re: J! archive glossary question
Are there any wagering scenarios in particular for which the generated suggestions that strike you as wrong after the rule change? My understanding is that it is not strategically wrong to play for the tie where you are forced to do so even after the rule change. It is more a matter of preference: do you feel lucky, punk? Well, do ya? (Or more precisely: when do you think you will be more lucky, in Final or in the Tiebreaker Round?)
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- Wet Paper Bag Charmer
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Re: J! archive glossary question
This is accurate for the lock-tie scenario. Although I wouldn't consider it luck, there are at least two things to consider. How you feel about the FJ category and what type of player is in 2nd place. If the FJ category is above average for you, you should tend to wager the dollar. If the player type in 2nd tends not to wager everything, you should tend to wager $0.Robert K S wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 11:43 am Are there any wagering scenarios in particular for which the generated suggestions that strike you as wrong after the rule change? My understanding is that it is not strategically wrong to play for the tie where you are forced to do so even after the rule change. It is more a matter of preference: do you feel lucky, punk? Well, do ya? (Or more precisely: when do you think you will be more lucky, in Final or in the Tiebreaker Round?)
The numbers show that either wagering $0 or $1 results in similar winning chances. Any other wager is extremely sub-optimal. How much, if any, of this thought process that should be noted in the calculator is up to you guys.
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Re: J! archive glossary question
With a lock-tie the raw odds are the same either way, but the correlation effect with FJ! responses makes the $1 bet a bit more optimal (but either bet is perfectly acceptable depending on the specific circumstances).
In some scenarios (like "first equals second plus third") it's probably better to bet the extra dollar since by betting for a tie you're risking a tie in two outcome scenarios (RRx) if right vs. helping you in one (WWR) if wrong.
Based on my analysis probably the strongest case for going for the tie is in an exact 2/3 game with the player in third too distant to be a factor (or not playing at all) - even then both bets are sound choices.
In some scenarios (like "first equals second plus third") it's probably better to bet the extra dollar since by betting for a tie you're risking a tie in two outcome scenarios (RRx) if right vs. helping you in one (WWR) if wrong.
Based on my analysis probably the strongest case for going for the tie is in an exact 2/3 game with the player in third too distant to be a factor (or not playing at all) - even then both bets are sound choices.