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by talldatethrow
1026 days ago
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As a sailor, you're giving sailors a bit too much credit. Those things all matter, but to say that the average sail boat racer is even optimizing for all those things efficiently at once is a huge stretch. A lot of sail boat racing is strategy and properly performing the basically in a hostile environment. If you could ensure great strategy based on learned data, and immaculate execution based on properly tuned controls, I think you'd win easily. |
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I've made robot models in the past, but never for anything involving water (although I actually have done physics simulations with water but nothing with robots). I don't know anything about sailing and I'm definitely not an expert at building simulations, but I can grok what GP meant and I agree with his assessment.
To give a rough analogy - it would be like trying to learn how to be a racecar driver on a videogame with simplified physics. There are professional drivers that use simulators and iRacing (or Assetto Corsa or a handful of other games) but none of them are training on Need for Speed, and it's because the difference is so stark you're actually handicapping yourself instead of learning how to drive. You need the simulation to be close enough to reality before it starts to become useful.