MV Frank
New member
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- Oct 29, 2010
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The beginner thing in my post, I wrote down too fast before thinking about what I wrote, so I'll take back that sentence as too broad of a generalization. That's fair.
Reality is for that 99% of resorts, it is extremely cut-and-dry obvious, with 1% where there will be more than one interpretation.
Practically speaking, correcting whistler's "one mile" claim, bringing Sunday river to 1600 from 2300, not letting dozens of ski areas get away with "rounding up" to the next 100, knocking down deer valley from 3000 to 1900. All that is clear as day - no one gonna dispute it. And like I said, its 99% of cases.
But then in the 1% of cases you got a really weird terrain layout like killington, there has to be an element of both art + science. I mean we're talking about skiability here - which means that there needs an element of evaluation on top of pure technical measurement. It is a necessity. You have to ski it youself (the art) as well as survey the public (I guess this can be the science part). In fact, all you guys are data points...meaning that if there are enough people that have skied the mountain and have a differing interpretation about skiability, then we change it.
I will reiterate again that its literally about 1% of cases. There will always be some controversial cases, but overall we're trying to put something together that is as useful as possible.
This also leads to the last thing I said before which is to eventually include all the details. That is fully transparency into it and gives people a way to see how the stats apply to them. Like eventually for killington, we'd make a ton of extra notes that make it easy for all different types of skiers to get a gauge on how they ski the mtn.
Sound fair?
Reality is for that 99% of resorts, it is extremely cut-and-dry obvious, with 1% where there will be more than one interpretation.
Practically speaking, correcting whistler's "one mile" claim, bringing Sunday river to 1600 from 2300, not letting dozens of ski areas get away with "rounding up" to the next 100, knocking down deer valley from 3000 to 1900. All that is clear as day - no one gonna dispute it. And like I said, its 99% of cases.
But then in the 1% of cases you got a really weird terrain layout like killington, there has to be an element of both art + science. I mean we're talking about skiability here - which means that there needs an element of evaluation on top of pure technical measurement. It is a necessity. You have to ski it youself (the art) as well as survey the public (I guess this can be the science part). In fact, all you guys are data points...meaning that if there are enough people that have skied the mountain and have a differing interpretation about skiability, then we change it.
I will reiterate again that its literally about 1% of cases. There will always be some controversial cases, but overall we're trying to put something together that is as useful as possible.
This also leads to the last thing I said before which is to eventually include all the details. That is fully transparency into it and gives people a way to see how the stats apply to them. Like eventually for killington, we'd make a ton of extra notes that make it easy for all different types of skiers to get a gauge on how they ski the mtn.
Sound fair?