It's been a busy couple of days. In a moment of weakness I'd agreed some time ago to be the local contact for the Scottish regional heat of the
British Computer Society Programming Competition. Over the past five years, Edinburgh University hosted the event but this year Strathclyde University was the venue and department hosted the event and prepared the computer facilities for the teams and judges. So, yesterday, I ended up lugging PCs around labs so that each team would have the same specification of machine in separate rooms. I also had to install Visual C/C++ (spit!) on these machines as that was one of the two allowable environments for the competition. The other was Java 1.3.1 which, fortunately, is already installed on all of our machines.
This morning I had to get up early and drive through to Glasgow so that I was there in plenty of time to set up and welcome the contestants and judges. Naturally, the weather had turned wintry and quite heavy snow had fallen yesterday and overnight. Made the journey quite demanding in terms of concentration required.
To cut a long story short, I actually made good time and arrived an hour before registration began. Martine McFarlane was the other local organiser and she had arrived about 20 minutes later replete with sandwich lunches and 'ginger'.
The judges, Donald Bell, Matthew Leah, and Tony Printzis were next to arrive followed closely by the contestants. As befits convention, the team names were chosen carefully ;-):
- Apply Computing
- Byte IT
- Chewin' the Inode
- Heh
- Unexpected Exception
Tony is a veteran of the programming competition having won through to the finals in each of the last five years as a contestant and, in fact, his team - Glasgow Univerity's "Midnight Hackers" - won the competition last year. Like a poacher turned gamekeeper, Tony was 'promoted' to judge this year!
I'll link to the actual results page of all regional heats in due course, but in the Scottish heat the new Glasgow University team "Chewin' the Inode" (2 final year students plus 3 postgrad research students) narrowly beat the Cisco UK "Byte IT" team (4 professional software engineers). "Unexpected Exception" - five second-year Strathclyde students - at least scored a moral defeat as they managed to submit attempts for several of the problems and as a result could be counted as the third place contestants. I hope the Strathclyde students are up for it next year as they'll have learnt a lot from the experience today.
Good luck to the "Chewin' the Inode" team for the finals on March 23.
On a final note: I was absolutely amazed that none of the 21 contestants drank coffee!