That's funny. Most im my club's group don't want to learn how to score. They come out and shoot because it's fun.
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Seriously, though, in our small local group most everyone gets a chance to take score. And on top of that, the shooter has every opportunity to take a look at the timer. You do what you can, and ultimately, you have to trust somebody in the mix. Otherwise you wouldn't be involved in action shooting sports at all.
Vince Pinto already knows. There was a thread on Global Village that got locked down almost immediately.

From what I understand, Practiscore was what started the whole thing. Somebody changed scores that had already been entered and it was noticed.
...What would be even better would be having new timers that synch to the scoring device, once scoring is done the RO can easily confirm the time on the scoring device is the same as the time on the timer. They don't need to be active synchs during the competitors run either, it can happen when the scoring is complete and the two units are close enough together for it to happen. Just imagine, using that kind of tech (which exists) at the end of the match you could synch your device (or during the match I suppose) and go home and analyze everything you did, you'd have lots of your splits (depending on stages and where the RO is but you'd get most of them). You'd know everything about your stage, the score on each target and the time each target took. And you'd know if there was any hinky crap being done by the RO or anyone else.
HB, hadn't heard that, I would hope that the backend of the system would show when and what changes were made so that it would show clearly to the MD and Stats people at the end of a match, but I haven't looked that far into PS to know if that's the case. I know with the database I did for our farm, which tracked hundreds of thousands of data points that I could call up changes going back 5 years and see what the original info was, when the change was made, who made it and the new data. Changing scores after the fact isn't anything new though, I recall a match in PG where this was brought up, and a couple since then, accountability is the key. With PS at least competitors can be kept up to date on what is happening at a match and changes would likely be noticed pretty quickly.
I might be wrong about how the initial cheating was suspected, but I don't think I'm wrong about how PS works. Shot Coach was definitely how the video was tested. Given the revision history of Practiscore and the reasons, I don't think it's quite as sophisticated as we would like with regard to initial data, and tracking changes.
Most of the code deals with being a good sportsman/woman, these things we were taught as youngsters.




























