Suvv said: ‘i think specifying the types of machine being made might lead to some people thinking that it is rigged ie the production company feels this type has to win so they constantly stack the deck in its favour type feelings and to be honest i would rather have the freedom to make what i want as it keeps the field open to everyone.’
-I would rather have the freedom to make what I want too but it doesn’t always work that way. TV production companies are only interested in viewing figures. So if they have the freedom to do what they think is best for their viewing figures they are more likely to go forward.
Craig said: ‘I like the idea of there being a limit on costs this has been discussed too many times before and each time you get stuck on the "how to police it" questions if you did have a we buy your robot for £500 people would still spend thousands because for some winning is everything! ‘
- I think the desire to win would be balanced by the knowledge that their machine will be fed into a crusher if they lose. If not, the look on their faces will make great TV.
‘Destruction they will want to see bits of some ones robot fall off.’
- It seems to me that this argues strongly for the price limit. Robots built under this constraint are likely to be less robust.
‘If you can think of an idea for a program format that is cheap to produce, that is different, with interesting machines, a bit of destruction, and variety. Well we may have a winner.’
Varied robots (either by a price cap or production company selection) and on camera destruction of losers appeals to me.
-I would rather have the freedom to make what I want too but it doesn’t always work that way. TV production companies are only interested in viewing figures. So if they have the freedom to do what they think is best for their viewing figures they are more likely to go forward.
Craig said: ‘I like the idea of there being a limit on costs this has been discussed too many times before and each time you get stuck on the "how to police it" questions if you did have a we buy your robot for £500 people would still spend thousands because for some winning is everything! ‘
- I think the desire to win would be balanced by the knowledge that their machine will be fed into a crusher if they lose. If not, the look on their faces will make great TV.
‘Destruction they will want to see bits of some ones robot fall off.’
- It seems to me that this argues strongly for the price limit. Robots built under this constraint are likely to be less robust.
‘If you can think of an idea for a program format that is cheap to produce, that is different, with interesting machines, a bit of destruction, and variety. Well we may have a winner.’
Varied robots (either by a price cap or production company selection) and on camera destruction of losers appeals to me.
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