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South Pacific Regional Contest Report, 1999
| 1999 Regional Results | Regional Contest Report | 1999 Problem Set |
The South Pacific Regional Contest was held on Saturday September 18th at 9 sites in Australia and New Zealand. Our representatives at the World Finals in Florida will be:
Australian and
Regional Champions
Bitter, Cynical and Coding, University
of Queensland
Andrew Over, Anthony Towns and David
Starkoff.
Wild Card
Mathematician, Lawyer, Physicist, University
of Melbourne
Andrew Rogers, John Detheridge and
John Fitzgerald.
New Zealand Champions
Team X (entered as three two), The
University of Waikato
Matthew Browne, Perry Lorier and Jonathan
Purvis
In the South Pacific Region, we run the contest simultaneously at 9 sites, 7 in Australia and 2 in New Zealand. The region is large geographically although it has a comparatively small population. There is a 4 hour time difference between Perth in the west and New Zealand in the east, and to start the contest at the same actual time, we have 4 different local start times!
Here are reports from most of the sites:
Tasmania
from Mike Cameron-Jones
This year's event was held in Launceston
with teams from both campuses participating. The result on the day was
that the Hobart "Bohemiath" team, with two-thirds of last year's site champion
team, again overcame any
disadvantage of playing away, to take
provisional first place at the site by a few minutes from the local "2
guys, a girl and a PC place" team. With all teams getting at least one
solution accepted on the day,
congratulations are due to all the site's
contestants.
Dunedin
from Chris Handley
Overall the contest at Dunedin went well.
All the teams enjoyed themselves, even the teams that did not get anything
out. I think that, being New Zealanders, they are glad they do not participate
in Australian voting, particularly as many of them had trouble getting
it right. [Note : We had a problem on Australian Voting.]
Auckland
from Phil Robbins
We had a visit from Brenda Chow (BJ) from
IBM who drops in on a number of regional contests during the year.
I hope she enjoyed New Zealand as much as Bill Clinton did, despite having
to drive a car with the steering wheel on the "wrong" side!
Our contest was a close run affair with
team X from the University of Waikato getting a winning third solution
with their final submission, just defeating the team from Victoria University
in Wellington who had the fastest time for 2 solutions. We
later discovered that two teams had been given incorrect rejections, so
our final placings have changed after verification.
Team X will represent New Zealand in Florida.
Adelaide
from Paul Calder
In total, we had 5 teams competing at
the Adelaide site, comprising 3 from Computer Science at Flinders and 2
from Engineering at Flinders. It was somewhat disappointing that
no teams were present from other Adelaide
universities.
The contest got away right on schedule
at 11:30 Adelaide time, with the teams scattering to digest the problems
and plan their approach. As expected, some teams choose to work on
problems in tandem, while others assigned individuals to different problems.
Our first submissions arrived at the judge's
desk around 80 minutes into the contest, but it wasn't until the 174th
minute that we had our first correct solution. By about 3 hours in,
energies were beginning to flag, which made the arrival of the pizzas all
the more welcome. After a quick feast, the teams went back to work
with a vengance.
A last-minute flurry of activity saw 2
teams with near-correct solutions. However, the judges were not (quite)
convinced and the teams had to be satisfied with just 1 solution each.
Technically, the contest went without
a hitch, thanks to the support of technical staff, judges, and helpers.
Overall, most people reported that they
enjoyed the day, found the contest worthwhile and stimulating, and would
be interested in competing again in future. From the university's
point of view, we were very happy to be
involved in the contest and have every
intention of hosting again next year.
Sydney
from James Richard Curran
We had 15 teams competing this year, predominantly
from Sydney University and the University of New South Wales, with one
team from the University of Wollongong. Our first correct entry from
the New South Sharks (UNSW) came in in just 29.4 minutes. This team
turned out to be the best on the day, submitting 3 correct solutions quite
quickly but being unable to crack any others for the rest of the competition.
Most teams came close to correct solutions for various questions.
No submissions were made for the Isotopes problem and there were no correct
solutions for problem C, E, or H. Overall the University of New South Wales
performed the strongest, with the one team from the University of Wollongong
coming 3rd. Everybody (even the frustrated) enjoyed the day and the
competition.
Brisbane
from Chris Ho-Stuart
At twelve noon, ten teams opened the sealed
envelopes to embark on their five hour marathon of problem solving.
After 35 minutes the first submission
came in -- a reject! After that, there seemed no end. The contest runners
were continually busy ferrying submissions, clarifications, and printouts
between the teams and the judges. For those who could manage the time to
look at the scene, it was quite a sight. Thirty students with furrowed
brows, absent mindedly munching on M&Ms as they shuffled printouts
and problems, or typed their solutions, or stared in despair at a screen
of code which was not yet behaving as they wished.
Tension mounted quickly at the 65 minute
mark. The leader board at the front of the room showed one team with a
correct submission! Soon results starting coming in from other sites, and
these also were added to the
leader board.
After 4 and a half hours, there were two
categories of contestant. Some were exhausted, and just wanted it to end!
Others were flying on adrenelin, madly trying to get that last submission
which would earn them
glory in the final results.
And then it was over. After a collective
sigh of relief, participants started to take stock as the judges ran through
the batch of last minute submissions. The general view was -- this was
FUN! And we want to do it AGAIN. But after we've had a year to rest...
Well done to all the teams who took part,
and to all those who helped the whole event run to completion.
End results: the University of Queensland
were our local winners, taking out first and second places. Griffith University
came second, with their two teams coming third and fourth. Queensland University
of Technology was third, taking fifth and sixth. Equal seventh place to
two teams from University of Queensland and two teams from Queensland University
of Technology. All teams can take satisfaction from their participation
in
this event.
Perth
from Shamim Khan
The contest at the Perth site went well
despite one or two early hiccups which caused a 35 minute delayed start.
Three out of the four universities in Perth with CS departments - UWA,
Murdoch and Edith Cowan sent a total
of 10 teams - the notable exception for
the second year running was Curtin University. One of the teams from UWA
solved two problems to come first with a Murdoch team coming second.
Judging from the feedback received, everyone
seemed to have enjoyed the contest. A number of contestants who also did
it last year thought the problems were "harder and longer" this year.
Canberra
from Ramesh Sankaranarayana
We had four teams participating, all from
ANU. All the teams had a good time. They enjoyed having a go at the problems.
The pizza and snacks were most welcome, as were the gifts. Perhaps the
problems were a bit harder this year. We sure would love to host this again
next year.