barmar, on 2019-July-12, 08:54, said:
Actually I would expect it to be the opposite. In high level competition it's most important to segregate the players, because security is paramount. It's also more feasible because there are only a few tables.
A bridge club couldn't put everyone in separate spaces -- if you have 10 tables you'd need 40 rooms. A sectional or regional with 50 tables, where would they put hundreds of players? The first day of the LM Pairs, with over 100 tables, forget about it.
Basically, I wouldn't expect to see this except in the kinds of events that currently use screens.
A bridge club couldn't put everyone in separate spaces -- if you have 10 tables you'd need 40 rooms. A sectional or regional with 50 tables, where would they put hundreds of players? The first day of the LM Pairs, with over 100 tables, forget about it.
Basically, I wouldn't expect to see this except in the kinds of events that currently use screens.
Probably I wasn't clear, as I don't disagree with what you say here. The kinds of events that currently use screens (table dividing screens, not tablet screens) are the ones most likely to continue to require physical presence of the players - so travel to a single venue and some f2f social contact. Clubs might try to simply replace physical cards with tablets, but I doubt it would last for long, both because of the logistic difficulties (how to seat people in the same space as before without visual UI) and because many would prefer to play from home. Of course that would be the beginning of the end for clubs too.