tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3762197037886589909.post9153432868681381596..comments2023-12-05T09:07:24.960-09:00Comments on Mushing Tech: What data would you like to see?Melindahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03551112597725478690noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3762197037886589909.post-28376117174221132642012-01-19T22:39:49.990-09:002012-01-19T22:39:49.990-09:00Melinda, great issue to bring up. All the spreadsh...Melinda, great issue to bring up. All the spreadsheet gurus on the mushing scene need to come together to create a Google Docs Spreadsheet template with a few nifty formulas. Then someone begins pushing it to race organizers. Voila, standardization. The spread can be embedded on any old race website and edited live by anyone with clearance--not just webmasters, but even CP managers (if they have internet). At Trackleaders we manage race info on Google Docs for these collaborative reasons. I am slowly trying to convert everyone involved to the ways of the G-Cloud ;)<br /><br />Related to the question of (hidden) info serendipity, Trackers open us up to the secret world of on-trail (btwn CPs) rest. What of that, and how is strategy determined? Trackleaders have always plotted rests of 4 hours or greater on the musher's individual history pages, but maybe we need to reduce that threshold to detect more subtle micro-rests.Matthew Leehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11706479859518245215noreply@blogger.com