thewca / worldcubeassociation.org

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https://www.worldcubeassociation.org/
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What are all the various WCA registration platforms out there? #1084

Open jfly opened 7 years ago

jfly commented 7 years ago

This issue exists to collect a list of all the WCA registration platforms that exist, and who maintains them. Having an accurate list of these might be useful as we work on #946 (the people that built these websites are the kinds of people who might be interested in the "big" json).

(Inspired in part by this Fantasy Cubing spreadsheet. Last checked by @jfly on 2017-01-14)

Under active development

Looking to move to the WCA

Status unknown

fw42 commented 7 years ago

cubecomp.de (GitHub) - Still maintained by @fw42?

yep

jonatanklosko commented 7 years ago

In Poland there are two main websites

I don't know the developers' GitHub accounts (not sure if they even have those).

viroulep commented 7 years ago

For Tribox we need to summon @kotarot! Japan uses its own registration system, but as far as I could understand by discussing with Kotaro in Japan, they would be interested in moving to the WCA website after i18n is done.

pingskills commented 7 years ago

Tim McMahon is responsible for the Speedcubing Australia site. He will start using the WCA site once it supports payments.

TimMcMahon commented 7 years ago

@jbrungar maintains https://www.speedcubing.nz

a-Maass commented 7 years ago

there is also this: http://europe.cubing.net/ I think there were some others that I either can't remember the names of or have started to use the WCA website instead

jfly commented 7 years ago

there is also this: http://europe.cubing.net/

AFAIK, these are just competition websites. I believe they use the WCA website for registration. Someone please correct me if I'm wrong.

pedrosino commented 7 years ago

I have a registration system we used a few times (including Worlds 2015): http://www.cuber.com.br/campeonato/

But I don't have it on GitHub :P

I'm pondering whether maintaining it is good or not (which includes moving to another website and maybe re-writing in rails). Main feature is being pt-BR and flexibility to show messages about payment after registration.

coder13 commented 7 years ago

https://euro2016.cubing.net/ is worth noting Although the website isn't a typical comp site, it works really well.

TimMcMahon commented 7 years ago

Is it worth comparing features of each system? E.g. Would making "possible events" available during registration be desirable so that organisers can determine whether there's interest in hosting particular events without committing to them upfront or would this create more complexity for payment?

jfly commented 7 years ago

https://euro2016.cubing.net/ is worth noting

@Luis-J-Ianez did a great job with that website. Interestingly enough, the actually used the WCA website for registration.

Is it worth comparing features of each system?

If you'd like to write up a list of features and what systems support what, I won't stop you, but I don't see a huge benefit to it. I can't speak for other registration platforms, but the WCA website is not going to add features just because some other website supports them, we're only going to add features once a bunch of people have asked for them.

kimchikoon commented 7 years ago

In Hong Kong, we are using our own system for registration of the cubers, instead of the system in WCA. The system is taken care by Hong Kong Rubik's Cube Union (HKRCU).

micahstairs commented 7 years ago

All competitions in Canada have registration on http://canadiancubing.com/. It's under active development by Dave Campbell.

I've never seen the code before, but I'm guessing it's in a private repo in https://github.com/canadiancubing.

kotarot commented 7 years ago

Hi there, Yeah, as Philippe mentioned, I know circumstances in Japan (sorry that I didn’t notice my notification for long days).

Most competitions in Japan use JRCA as the platforms. This website is based on XOOPS Cube application, and the registration system is implemented on the application, but the system was created quite a few years ago and is not maintained anymore. Moreover, the interface is not friendly for non-Japanse speakers. Tribox Open, which we held in this month, uses own registration platform which was developed for only this competitions (but we might use it in next Tribox Open), but it is a kind of ad-hoc system and is not capable of general uses.

So, Japanese delegates and I are willing to move system and use the WCA's system. And yeah! Internationalization accelerates our motivation to move! Some Japanese cubers (including a Delegate and me) are now translating the website for i18n.

jfly commented 5 years ago

This issue is probably pretty out of date now. @Logiqx put together a pretty neat page here that lists a number of actively used registration platforms: https://logiqx.github.io/wca-ipy/Future_Competitions.html.