shahriar_manzoor wrote:Well first I would like to say was TCCC05 was the contest where only one problem was solved in the final contest? Was the problemset fair? Or was it way too difficult? What I mean that we sometimes need to critisize topcoder as well

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Well, in my opinion the problemset in the finals was difficult, maybe
too difficult, but not
way too difficult. All of the problems were solvable... but not at that time, under all the pressure and with so little time on our hands. Still, I think that making the last problemset this hard is a good decision -- the finals shouldn't be a contest in fast typing.
shahriar_manzoor wrote:I think five hour contest is fair because then you can come back from a disaster. In Topcoder often I see very good coders to badly: like Derek Kisman out of top 20. In a five hour contest you can never expect Derek out of first 20 can you?
Yeah, on the skill vs. luck scale, in ACM a little bit less luck is involved. (Failing to solve 1 of 8 problems matters less than failing to solve 1 of 3. Also, in ACM you have the chance to fix your mistakes -- and this may be the biggest difference.)
On the other hand, the form of the TopCoder contest is the result of a different tradeoff -- the tradeoff between fairness and attraction. By making the contests shorter, they are more attractive to watch, and also they may be more attractive to participate in -- even a less skilled contestant can be lucky and place well if the 3 given problems suit him. (This is mainly the case with the practice matches, sometimes the whole problemset covers a single topic, e.g. formal languages. The competition sets tend to be more balanced.)
And about Derek (aka SnapDragon)... well, I don't really remember seeing him out of top 20 anywhere
