Friday, December 31, 2004
A message from Mothers Against Drunk Chessplaying
But one thing I learned, don't play drunk chess, especially when you don't have proper shot glasses.See also "How to Play Chess With Beer".
Thursday, December 30, 2004
Chess, Personality and Madness revisited
I have to say I completely agree when taking myself as the entire population. I am a difficult case. I speak my mind with disregard for the consequences (I'm usually aware that what I say is controversial but don't normally care), I have little time for the needs of others and am generally considered to be inconsiderate ... all charges to which I plead guilty ... it sounds arrogant to admit that I have these faults and to then follow it up by saying "I don't care" but I really don't care as I have no interest in spending my time tiptoeing around people ... I barely have enough time for my interests as it is! So in answer to DG's question ... I'd say yes difficult cases are attracted to chess and I think the reason is that you have to be difficult to get anywhere as chess absorbs life for those who get seriously involved!
Those who know the grip it takes once you get involved in the game know that the rest of life pales into insignificance ... and I think one reason why it's only difficult people who get that far is that difficult people tend to have unfulfilling personal lives and thus have little to counter the appeal of chess. Again referring to my own case I plead guilty to that ... I had friends at one point, I had a social life, I had hope for my career ... now all I want to do is study weak squares ...
Wednesday, December 29, 2004
Chess - it's a killer game?
Does anyone have any specific knowledge on this topic?
Chess in Tucson
Chess Knights - Borders, 5870 E. Broadway. A chess challenge for players of any skill level. Boards and pieces provided. 6 p.m. Mondays. Free. 584-0111.
Tuesday, December 28, 2004
Is chess the ultimate metaphor?
Here is a typical example from Froggy Ruminations' post "Usama bin Laden is NOT Dead":
....But at some point, muslims are going to have to realize that they are acting as pawns in a global chess game being played by a handful of despotic psychopaths who are all too willing to sacrifice them in what will clearly be a losing effort.
It's a call to keep certain people as either an ethnic curio on the shelf for the enjoyment of European and North American anthropologists or, equally vile, as exploitable pawns for the use of political activists.
It seems the wing-nuts were wrong to consider Spc. Wilson a pawn of the liberal media. He's actually a pawn of the Bush administration -- just like all the other troops in Iraq.
Play chess at the bank
Link - Pictures - Hat Tip: RootSecure.net
The newest Knight
In his most recent post, Sensei informed us that he "woke up with a killer sore throat and a headache." Let's hope he isn't following the same path as the Orange Knight.
Monday, December 27, 2004
Before it's too late
I might have trouble today in a game against the likes of Noah Pang, but several years ago I schooled him in the Vienna. While I'm sure he has long since forgotten the game, I haven't! And then there was my only encounter with Josh Friedel back when he was a B-player. While I only managed a draw in a Ruy Lopez - Schliemann, what I remember most is that thanks to some strange last round pairings I managed to win the tournament a half-point ahead of him. It's these memories of small victories that keep us going as we grey.
What brought back these images today? This piece by Waddling Thunder on his long ago encounter with Hikaru Nakamura (unfortunately for him, not as pleasant a memory).
Chess Dream
Had that dream segment where I was playing chess with giant flamingos as the chess pieces again...it seems to be a repeating segue segment...very bizarre.
Sunday, December 26, 2004
Do you want to be a film star?
SVA student film directed by award-winning student filmmaker Mike Capone. Two exes meet by chance in a coffeehouse. They seek closure in a clash of wills. “Chess Game” is a character-driven script which will give actors the chance to display a broad range of emotions. We will be shooting over a long weekend in late January on Long Island. No pay, but copy/ credit/ transportation/ housing provided. SAG waiver is available. If interested, please submit a copy of your digital portfolio to this casting director.
Saturday, December 25, 2004
One person's junk is another's treasure
Neither of us wants to be the Yankees...
That's what gift certificates are for
What do you do with the gift that you hate? It's a conundrum that much is sure....
I ... got a Red Sox-Yankees chess set. What am I supposed to do with that. I don't play chess and none of my friends play chess. I guess I could set it up like a display item, but then the kids are going to grab the pieces and I'll be stepping on rooks and queens and killing my feet and it will be a bad scene.
Friday, December 24, 2004
When the kids are more mature than the parents
What is it about grade-school chess articles that bring out the worst in some people? Chess [news] stories ... bring out of the apparent woodwork upset readers from what some have called the cutthroat world of K-12 chess.Read "Chess stories bring out competitive emotions" from The Brownsville Herald.
....I anticipated some negative feedback, and got it, but didn't expect to hear things along the lines of: "My child is better than that child" or "Why wasn't my child listed in the story?" and "So-and-so did well because they had a handicap."
Thursday, December 23, 2004
The Four Musketeers
See also "Tilting at windmills".
Watch Richard Feynmann go mad - Live!
....It feels strange participating in life at the moment whilst my head is absorbed in chess and thinking about supercomputers that might be our operating system on this planet... having to brush my teeth, catch buses and eat all seems slightly abstract hense my belief that I might be going insane. I'm not actually scared of the prospect of insanity... that may sound... well, insane but it's true...Read "Hey Mr. Tambourine man, play a song for me, I'm not tired and there is no place I'm going to".
...does chess make men go mad or do mad men play chess?? I guess that's one of the chicken and egg type questions that does nothing more than make those who think about it want to get horribly drunk.
Wednesday, December 22, 2004
Are chessplayers inherently pessimistic?
It turns out that most people are apparently not so good at thinking through how their own ideas will fail - checking themselves for weaknesses. This process of auditing one's own ideas for mistakes and hidden consequences is called falsification. Who is good at it, you ask? Well, here's one example: chess masters.... Chess adepts have been shown... to do what they do not just by generating ideas, but by generating them and shooting them down.
Chess Injuries
Why is it that when participating in an "extreme sport" like skateboarding or snowboarding, people always brag when they spill, but not when they slip on the sidewalk? I would guess it's because of the inherent risk in the sports. By getting injured in something that has a risk of injuring you, you are at least dignified in having taken up the risk in the first place. There's no dignity in injuring yourself playing chess (although, in that case, many would still brag due to the anecdotal value) because the risk of injury that you're taking upon yourself is low...
Adam Smith not on chess
He seems to imagine that he can arrange the different members of a great society with as much ease as the hand arranges the different pieces upon a chess-board. He does not consider that the pieces upon the chess-board have no other principle of motion besides that which the hand impresses upon them; but that, in the great chess-board of human society, every single piece has a principle of motion of its own, altogether different from that which the legislature might choose to impress upon it.Quote of the Week from the Adam Smith Institute.
Tuesday, December 21, 2004
Take it to the bank
...if there are shops that cater to people who are willing to buy chess pieces made from pewter or brass or marble (those all sound very pretty and weighty and handsome) and chess boards made of high gloss polyurethane (that sounds really elegant), there must be a lot of money in this activity.And, why don't you hear much about women chessplayers?
...because women are so good at chess that they are able to retire on their winnings early in their careers and thereafter leave the field to the men.Finally, we all know why chessplayers are smart:
...because they have figured out a way to make a lot of money while sitting down most of the time.
Maybe we need drug testing after all
Read "Sharper minds" from the Los Angeles Times (Hat tip: ChessBase News).The age of smart drugs is dawning. Modafinil is just one in an array of brain-boosting medications — some already on pharmacy shelves and others in development — that promise an era of sharper thinking through chemistry....
In a series of experiments in 2001, Sahakian and colleagues found that in games that test mental skill, subjects who took a 200-milligram dose of modafinil paid closer attention and used information more effectively than subjects given a sugar pill.
To coin a phrase
I don't like to play blog chess, where I have to assess whether something I do or say on my blog will cause this person to do this, which in turn means I can do that, and so on.
Monday, December 20, 2004
A rose by any other name ...
Why the change? Rather than provide you with a possibly incomplete or inaccurate answer, I'll ask our president to provide a comment below. I'm sure we won't have to wait long.
Please note that the weblog's URL remains the same - www.boylston-chess-club.blogspot.com. I can't afford to blow-up all my trackbacks, cross-links and directory/search engine listings.
"Green" chess
Question: Can you please tell me if the wood for your wooden chess sets is sourced from sustainably managed forests?Read "Environmentally Friendly Chess" at The Chess House.
Answer: The wood is part of an environmentally friendly global forestry population reduction program.
Sunday, December 19, 2004
Rest in Peace
Needless to say, I'm currently partial to the blog; though I do have to admit that forums probably engender more discussion/give and take. What's your opinion?
Update (12/21/04): The CIC blog is dead. The funeral was a sad, but touching, affair.
GM Wolff annotates the BCC Championship
Chess Notes By Harold Dondis and Patrick Wolff - Globe Correspondents
Christopher Chase of Somerville and Paul MacIntyre, president of the Boylston Club, were running neck to neck in the last round of the Boylston Club Championship. MacIntyre emerged the victor by a nose as he defeated David Glickman in a Bishop's opening in the last round while Charles Riordan held Chase to a draw arising from a Sicilian defense.
Had Chase not lost the game published today, he could have appropriated the championship. Here Alex Cherniack gets a clear advantage playing Black, as Chase elects on his 10th move to resist pressure on Black's Queen side, instead of reconnoitering his Queen's Knight to the opposite wing. Cherniack appears to win the battle for the center, and Chase banks on a pawn storm and minor piece attack on the Queen side. But Cherniack uses a Rook to defend against White's Bishop and Knight. With a little time advantage, Black finds the right squares to assault White's King with a surprising sacrifice and King hunt that ends the game.
[Event "BCC Championship"]
[Site "Somerville, MA USA"]
[Date "2004.10.13"]
[Round "6"]
[White "Chase, Chris"]
[Black "Cherniack, Alex"]
[Result "0-1"]
[WhiteUSCF "2289"]
[BlackUSCF "2228"]
[ECO "C66"]
[Opening "Ruy Lopez"]
[Variation "Steinitz Defense"]
[Annotator "GM Patrick Wolff"]1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Be7 4.0-0 Nf6 5.Re1
[The easiest way to advantage is 5.d4!]
5...d6 6.c3
[Here again, experience suggests 6.d4! is the easiest way to advantage]
6...0-0 7.Bxc6
[Having taken the trouble to set up d2-d4 with c2-c3, why make this exchange now before it is necessary? Simply 7.d4 still promises an edge]
7...bxc6 8.d4 Nd7 9.Nbd2 a5 10.a4?!
[White starts getting distracted by the queenside. Now that he has chosen this setup, he should continue consistently: 10.Nf1 Ba6 11.Ng3, followed by Be3, Qd2, etc.]
10...Ba6 11.Nb3 Bc4! 12.Nfd2? Be6
[White's pieces are discombobulated, and so he has fallen behind in development]
13.c4? f6
[Good enough, but even better is 13.f5! To blow open the center, e.g. 14.d5 cxd5! 15.cxd5 (15.exd5 Bf7 is just better for Black) 15.Bf7 16.Nc4 c6!?]
14.d5 Bf7 15.Nb1
[Or 15.dxc6 Nb8 and 16.Nxc6, with advantage]
15...Nb6 16.Qc2 f5! 17.dxc6 Nxc4 18.N1d2 Nxd2 19.Bxd2 fxe4 20.Nxa5 d5
[Black's center and two bishops are far better than White's queenside play]
21.Nb7 Qe8 22.Ba5 Rc8 23.b4 Bg6 24.Qc1
24...Qf7 25.Rf1 Bh5
[The attack masses on the kingside, and White is in big trouble!]
26.Qc2 Qg6! 27.Kh1 Rf6! 28.b5 Qxg2+!!
29.Kxg2 Rg6+ 30.Kh3
[Or 30.Kh1 Bf3#]
30...Bg4+ 0-1
[It is checkmate after 31.Kg2 (or 31.Kg3) 31...Bf3+ 32.Kh3 Rh6#]
The French Defense in Haiku
One man has spaceRead "Chess Haiku" at Man de la Maza.
The other controls the tension.
A knight, intrigued, leaps.
Saturday, December 18, 2004
A man and his chess set - the sequel
CLARK AIR BASE, Philippines - Arriving to a humanitarian mission without their beloved chessboard to keep them busy, some helicopter squadron Marines got creative.Read "Marines forgot to bring chess set on Philippines mission, so they improvised".
Using the bottom of a wooden "7-cube" supply box for a board, spare helicopter parts for pieces and some imagination, they made their own.
See also "A man and his chess set".
Friday, December 17, 2004
Is it pronounced "Herb" or "Erb"?
There's no need to end the party at midnight; come on by the club on New Year's morning. Registration is from 10:00-11:30am.
Top ways to freak out your roommate
29. Sit in front of a chess board for hours, saying nothing, doing nothing. Then look up and say, "I think this game goes a lot faster with two players."From Breaking His Heart...
Thursday, December 16, 2004
Artificial Intelligence & Chess
Alexander Kronrod, a Russian AI researcher, said "Chess is the Drosophila of AI." He was making an analogy with geneticists' use of [the] fruit fly to study inheritance. Playing chess requires certain intellectual mechanisms and not others. Chess programs now play at grandmaster level, but they do it with limited intellectual mechanisms compared to those used by a human chess player, substituting large amounts of computation for understanding. Once we understand these mechanisms better, we can build human-level chess programs that do far less computation than do present programs.
Unfortunately, the competitive and commercial aspects of making computers play chess have taken precedence over using chess as a scientific domain. It is as if the geneticists after 1910 had organized fruit fly races and concentrated their efforts on breeding fruit flies that could win these races.
Wednesday, December 15, 2004
A man and his chess set
Marc at marchdesign points us to pictures of inventions created by prisoners. Of interest to this audience is a chess set created from toilet paper and sugar water.
On Maslow's hierarchy of needs, I believe chess falls somewhere between safety and love.
Same old same old
Or, do you want an improved, vibrant, competitive, and warm club?
club improvement survey
online at http://www.bu.edu/cgs/bcc-photos/index.htm
Tell all your chess friends to respond also --
including non-members, lapsed members, and folks who don't play at our events.
Fighting Words
I don't understand people who spend their time and energy playing a chess game as a challenge; I'd much rather be trying to challenge myself by discovering something nobody else has discovered before...Well, that certainly feels like a stinging slap in the face; so first, an emotional initial reaction: "[expletive], you arrogant academic [expletive]!" Now I feel a whole lot better. Let's try a calmer, more cogent response:
Chess is not solved and therefore there is still much to be discovered. The vast majority of games reach points not seen before, even if not in an absolute sense for a few games following theory, almost always for one or both players based their previous experience and current knowledge. OK, a very few games have both players following known theory from beginning to end, but what percentage of the total games played could this possibly be? Therefore, one must conclude that virtually every game offers the opportunity for new discoveries.
I certainly don't intend to suggest that chess discoveries are any more valuable or worthwhile than the types of discoveries that Dr. Macleod might be thinking of. And I suppose if he is thinking about things like the discovery of penicillin then the positive societal impact of enhanced chess knowledge can hardly compare. Nevertheless, from a purely academic perspective, I see no basis for suggesting that his chosen subject for investigation is a priori superior to the pursuit of chess knowledge.
Though I'm sure it's less fun (to a chessplayer, anyway)!
Tuesday, December 14, 2004
Why wives and girlfriends needn't worry...
Ian Buchanan conducts an experiment and gains a valuable insight.
From the Harvard University Police Log ...
Nov. 20, 11:53 p.m. — Officers were dispatched to Pforzheimer House on a report of a possible fight in progress. Officers determined it was not a fight but a “human” chess game.
Source: The Harvard Crimson (Hat tip: Andrew Moroz's Blog)
Monday, December 13, 2004
Development of chess thinking
An offer too good to pass up
Chess skill and Chinese food exchange
Do you like Chinese food and Chinese culture? If someone can help my son to improve his Chess skill, I also can make Chinese food for him or her.
Next time you are in Witchita
The Wichita Chess Club ... meets on Sundays at Borders Bookstore & Cafe, 1715 N. Rock Road, on Tuesdays at Barnes & Noble, 8021 E. Kellogg, and on Fridays at the Barnes & Noble location at 3045 N. Rock Road.
Informal games can often be found at Riverside Perk, 1144 Bitting. If a cup of coffee helps your concentration, this might be just the place to make your move.
If the roar of an alternative rock 'n' roll band or pulsating beats from a jukebox hone your concentration, try setting up the pieces at Kirby's Beer Store, 3227 E. 17th St. The Kirby's kibitzers can be counted on for lively commentary, too.
Sunday, December 12, 2004
BCC Improvement Survey
Click this link to take the survey
The online survey is very quick: a few questions you can just click on, and a couple of free response questions where you can type out your detailed thoughts.
Please respond to it and ask your chess friends to respond as well. Even - especially - if they don't play at the club. We want to know how to attract them as players and perhaps as members.
We sent out about 700+ emails to:
- BCC members past and present
- Players at BCC events past and present
- Players at some local clubs
- Any one who ever played at the BU Open
And come to the annual Herb Healy on New Years day afternoon for chess, chess friends, and food.
Saturday, December 11, 2004
Develop your randomness skills
Press the "#" key? How do you do that?
- Other than pawn moves, most players typically use symbols to represent the pieces, e.g. KQRBN in English. Without these designations, I think you would have to use "full" algebraic, e.g. 1.g1-f3 instead of 1.Nf3, to avoid ambiguity.
- Where two rooks can move to d8, Ra8d8 is certainly clear but Rad8 is more compact and just as accurate. There is another variation on this, e.g. Rooks on d8 and d5 could lead to a move like R5d7.
- While "x" is the universal symbol for a capture in descriptive notation, in algebraic ":" is also used. However, no capture symbol is actually necessary as there is no practical difference in meaning between N:e5 and Ne5. In either case the knight now resides on the e5 square and the opponent's piece that was there (if any) is obviously there no longer.
Must be an old joke...
What do you call a group of chess grandmasters bragging about their recent tournaments in the hotel lobby?
Chess nuts boasting in an open foyer.
Friday, December 10, 2004
Who cares about checkmate?
“We determine winners by assigning point values to each of the chess pieces,” Henderson said. “At the end of the allotted time for the match, the points are totaled to determine the winner.”I don't suspect gambits and sacrifices are particularly popular. But apparently, the prize for the winner is:
The winner this year was fifth-grader Matt Moran, who also won last year’s tournament as a fourth-grader. As a bonus, Matt has played a special match against the principal of the school for each of the two years the event has been held. “Last year Matt beat Ron Janesko,” Henderson said. “This year he was beaten by our current principal, Terry Kenney."
Courtesy of the Tri-Town News.
Humanity strikes back
"That was a totally unpredictable gambit," lamented IBM Chess programmer, Benny Morgan. "Our system lacked the capacity to function against such a boring human being and it simply shut down."
Thursday, December 09, 2004
Move over Elista...
Here's a surprise gambit: the city with the most chess grandmasters per capita in the world is Beersheba [in Israel]....it's a ratio of one grandmaster per 22,875 residents in this city of 183,000. That's...impressive compared to traditional chess centers in Russia, like Moscow with one grandmaster out of every 170,000 people, or St. Petersburg with one per 215,000...
Wednesday, December 08, 2004
Beyond Deep Blue
- The computer should not move instantaneously so as to appear more human and methodical in its "thought" process
Eric's perspective is clearly limited by the one program he is using. Most commercial chess engines include time controls for the game and the engine will typically take advantage of that time to search deeper in its tree to find the best move. Contrary to what he states, engines do not complete their full analysis in seconds, but instead will continue to search further as time permits.
Update (12/10/04): I got this one wrong. Eric's actual point is that the computer should evaluate for the amount of time appropriate to the level/strength setting selected but then wait for a period of time before making the selected move. He believes that for beginning players this will be less intimidating than programs which move instantaneously. Interesting...
- The computer should show all the squares which it currently attacks so the player is less likely to move a piece to those squares.
This certainly seems like a useful training mode for beginners to help them visualize the opponent's threats. I know that Fritz has several training modes including one that shows all the moves a piece can make, but I'm not sure if showing attacked squares is one. The idea of tinting the squares to show how many pieces are attacking is quite an interesting idea. Now if I could just get my OTB opponents to color the board for me after each move, I'd be all set.
- The computer should play chess variants.
When I first started reading this section, I thought Eric might be thinking about Fischer-Random, Suicide, CrazyHouse, etc. In fact, there are specialized engines that play these variants. However, he had something completely different in mind (which left me rather amused):My favorite was Nuclear Chess. In that one, any piece could instead of moving choose to self-detonate, destroying itself and any pieces in adjacent squares....And then there was Thermonuclear Chess, where any piece could detonate after making a normal move.
Tuesday, December 07, 2004
Replacement parts?
Can you buy an entire chess set in a pawn shop?
Don't worry, he's not a member ...
A founder of a Colombian drug cartel that became the world's chief supplier of cocaine in the 1990s was transported to a Florida jail Saturday after being extradited from Colombia. Gilberto Rodriguez Orejuela, 65, landed before dawn in a U.S. government plane and was driven to a downtown Miami jail.... Prosecutors said Miguel Rodriguez Orejuela was the brains behind the concealment techniques, while Gilberto, nicknamed "The Chess Player," ran the family's financial empire...
Monday, December 06, 2004
Human, not so human
"At some point, millions of calculations per minute transformed itself into intuition." - Just in case anyone was tempted to believe this, let me add that computer viruses are dangerous microbes.
Anonymitch asks, "Does intelligence require consciousness?" and answers:
I think not.
It used to be that we thought it required intelligence to play a good game of chess. Machines can now play better chess than most any human. So, either the unconscious machines are intelligent or playing chess requires no intelligence.
Sunday, December 05, 2004
BCC at a glance - membership and active players revised December 1.
In 2004 thus far, 326 different chess players have played in at least one of our events. Events include an evening of blitz, a one-day or two day tournament, 4 evenings of the TNS and Monday swiss, up to 9 or 10 round robins in the championship cycle.
"Everyday Ed" Lafferty is the most active member of the club - he played in 46 events. Second is our newest board member, NM Charles Riordan, wtih 39. Board member and TD Bernardo Iglesias was very active, of course, with 37 events. Board member Natasha Christiansen played in 35 tournaments; Chris Williams - 32; Tony DiNosse 31; and our President, FM Paul MacIntyre - 28.
Participation in events was down in November, but the overall trend is still increasing, since the move to Somerville and during the first and second half intervals of the year. However, the Thursday Night Swiss had been improving, both in number and strength of players, but now has been stalling.
You can review our profiles here.
More on Chess and Madness
There is a notion adrift everywhere that imagination, especially mystical imagination, is dangerous to man's mental balance. Poets are commonly spoken of as psychologically unreliable; and generally there is a vague association between wreathing laurels in your hair and sticking straws in it. Facts and history utterly contradict this view. Most of the very great poets have been not only sane, but extremely business-like; and if Shakespeare ever really held horses, it was because he was much the safest man to hold them. Imagination does not breed insanity. Exactly what does breed insanity is reason. Poets do not go mad; but chess-players do. Mathematicians go mad, and cashiers; but creative artists very seldom. I am not, as will be seen, in any sense attacking logic: I only say that this danger does lie in logic, not in imagination....
To accept everything is an exercise, to understand everything a strain. The poet only desires exaltation and expansion, a world to stretch himself in. The poet only asks to get his head into the heavens. It is the logician who seeks to get the heavens into his head. And it is his head that splits.
I would argue that chess can be played using both logic and imagination. Are the hard core calculators, e.g., Tal or Kasparov, more susceptible to mental instability than intuitive positional players like Karpov? Perhaps Tal is not even a good example to choose -- was his bold sacrificial attacking play drawn from calculation, imagination or both?
See also "Chess, Personality and Madness"
Saturday, December 04, 2004
Time-less
Consider this: the recent scholastic grades tournament had a time control of game in thirty minutes. The Junior Open? Game in 45. In fact there has not been a scholastic tournament longer than G/60 in the Midwest since the Nationals and Supernationals in Illinois, and even then side events such as "5-minute" and "bughouse" tournaments accompanied the main event....Perhaps the true problem is how we are starting children out - they learn to play in G/30 tournaments (where notation is not only not required, but not even recommended!) and it is only natural to presume the game is to be played at this pace in the future.Here in Massachusetts the situation is much the same:
- Burger King Scholastics - G/45
- BCC Sunday Scholastics - G/30
- BCC Scholastic Quads - G/45
- MACA Scholastics - G/45
- BCC Thursday Night Swiss - 40/90 SD/25
- BCC Monday Night Swiss - 40/90 SD/15 (recently changed from 30/75 SD/30)
- Metrowest - 40/90 SD/30
- Waltham - G/60 (or faster)
- Newburyport - 40/80 SD/30
Friday, December 03, 2004
Thursday, December 02, 2004
We need more TNS players
Does Deep Blue present a challenge to Mormon religious thinking?
The wonder of this [the computer's ability to play "strategically"] lies in the fact that Deep Blue did not have any "deep strategy" algorithm. Its programmers did not design it to think strategically....At some point, millions of calculations per minute transformed itself into intuition.
The divide between the tactical calculation of [an] open position and the strategic intuition of a closed one arguably mirrors an ancient distinction in philosophy between two sorts of knowledge: episteme and techne....Mormon thinkers eager to lionize the seeming absence of a well-developed LDS theological tradition have frequently latched on to something like this distinction.....Deep Blue, however, seems to present a challenge to the neat dichotomy upon which this apologetic rests.
Tilting at windmills
Check out: (Don) Man de la Maza & Sancho Pawnza
Today I found yesterday's opening post of Self Flagellation to the Goddess Caissa, a blog which states that it is "in the tradition of (Don) Man de la Maza and Sancho Pawnza, another man's journey to escape the land of Class C rated chess."
Tuesday, November 30, 2004
How the World is Like Chess
A wise saying about chess, often attributed to Goethe, but apocryphal for all I know, goes like this. "For a game it is too serious, and for seriousness too much of a game."
Something similar is true of the world....
Sunday, November 28, 2004
An engineer's dream
Direct Link
Thursday, November 25, 2004
Chess Pie
CHESS PIE1 cup of melted butter
2 tablespoons water
6 eggs
1/2 teaspoon lemon juice
1/4 cup flour
1 cup buttermilk
3/4 cup sugarWhile mixing pie, melt butter. Beat sugar, flour, and eggs. Add milk, water, and lemon juice. Add butter last.
Pour into crust. Bake in a pre-heated 400-degree F. oven until pie is firm and golden brown. Recipe makes enough pie batter for a ten-inch pie or two nine-inch pies.
No writing moves in advance at the US Championship!
Scorekeeping move-by-move except the player may write both his/her own move and the opponent's response at the same time but may not respond before completing the recording of the moves. Do not write the move before it is played.
Wednesday, November 24, 2004
The ultimate sacrifice
Lt Malcolm was a good chess player. He looked like any other young marines officer: skinny, shaven-headed, although with a quite beaky nose.
Anyway, you could always pick him out. He would be the one with the chess board placed on an up-ended box of MREs (Meal Ready to Eat), working out moves.
I got to know him a little bit, as his bunk was opposite mine.
I would watch as he gave chess tips to those of his men who had not completely given in to poker or hearts.
About five hours into the battle, Lt Malcolm was killed.
Using chess for geo-political analogies
The chess piece that Russia desires for its new great game
Ukraine has been a chess piece in a strategic game played out by stronger regional forces since it was first mentioned in the fourth century BC.
Monday, November 22, 2004
A chess miracle
The game of chess has brought about a miracle in one mother’s child. A year ago, 13-year-old Jon Rousseau was uncomfortable in public. But on Saturday, Jon managed the first Turkey Quad chess tournament ...
Jon’s mother, Cynthia Rousseau, said that since her son began playing chess in the club, his social and intellectual capacities have shot from "zero to 100 percent."
Sunday, November 21, 2004
Put your pen down ...
Finally the FIDE rules committee has done the right thing by outlawing the practice of writing your move down before you play it. I never understood how anyone could argue that this didn't constitute note-taking (though many did and I'm sure still will). Here is the new wording of the rule from Guert Gijssen's November 2004 "An Arbiter's Notebook" column on ChessCafe.com:
Article 8.1: In the course of play each player is required to record his own moves and those of his opponents in the correct manner, move after move, as clearly and legibly as possible, in the algebraic notation (Appendix E), on the 'scoresheet' prescribed for the competition. It is forbidden to write the moves in advance.
Saturday, November 20, 2004
Chess, Personality and Madness
The first is an article from The Guardian, "Chess: the new rook'n'roll?". While primarily a puff piece about the role celebrities might be playing in a resurgence of interest in chess, the article also includes this intriguing quote:
As former British champion Bill Hartston said: "Chess is not something that drives people mad; it is something that keeps mad people sane."
This brings me to the second item -- an essay by Mr. Femi Oyekan of New Orleans reprinted in full on a weblog titled "Chess Underground". Mr. Oyekan takes the position that playing chess at a serious level actually leads one to develop off-center personality traits. Here are a couple excerpts:
Those of us on "my side" (read: serious chess players) may be a little more ... roundabout in the way we do things, ... at ease with unconventional thought patterns and ideas, ... comfortable with things that are "iffy". We often like to come at things from the side, rather than head on. ... you might also find that "my side" doesn't exactly dominate the top of the "kindness" and "easy to get along with" lists. Not to say that we are out and out assholes but we may have less of a tendency to be accommodating. We are slightly more difficult cases.
For starters, since you are playing by yourself for yourself, you must trust yourself. A habit of constantly scrutinizing the ideas of others (hopefully fairly) is inevitably formed. In extreme instances, this can even lead to a "my way or the highway" approach, although that doesn't tend to sit too well with people. More regularly, a major distrust of pop culture and even society as a whole is often generated.
Friday, November 19, 2004
To live in a place where chess matters
What else…chess, I’ve been meaning to write about chess. Chess is huge here. Everywhere you go there are chess games in progress. In one of the squares downtown there is actually an outdoor chess board inlaid into the concrete. I’ve never seen it unused, and usually there are people clustered around it watching. The bar I’ve been visiting ("Oops Bar") has several regulars who watch for known chess players and will pounce on you as soon as you step in the place. Have to fend them off with a stick .... Other establishments are completely dedicated to chess, and make money off selling drinks (non-alcoholic) to players.
Thursday, November 18, 2004
Visual representation of a computer playing chess
(hat tip: Soap Box Blog)
Wednesday, November 17, 2004
Pixar short film
Monday, November 15, 2004
How to Play Chess With Beer
Update (11/19): This chess and drinking idea seems to be getting some traction in the blogosphere. Here is William Bragg's take.
BCC scenes from the mid-1990s
Let me be one of the first to comment on the soft launch with a news item about the past: namely, I posted a set of photos by Steve Stepak on the BCC photo site about the 1990s at the club. A bit of nostalgia.
Saturday, November 13, 2004
Open for Business (sort of)
It is with both anticipation and trepidation that we kick this baby out of the nest. Fly, little bird, fly!
Friday, November 12, 2004
Blog Problems - Open Thread
Come to think of it, please leave a comment also if you are not experiencing problems so I can judge how widespread this issue is. Thanks.
Update (2/20 10:00pm EST): Seems to be a problem with the sidebar in IE, but I can't replicate it. I sent a help request to Blogger Support; hopefully they will get back to me soon. In the meantime, you were meaning to switch to Firefox anyways - why not now?
Update (2/21 10:00am EST): Looks like the problem is confined to IE and operating systems other than XP. I made a couple of changes last night, so if you have this configuration let me know if you are still experiencing this problem.
Update (2/22 4:00pm EST): Logis was able to narrow the problem down to a single post. It should be fixed now, but I'm waiting for confirmation from him.
More Accolades for BCC Weblog
"[One of] our choices for the top chess blogs on the Web." - About.com
"...a welcome...addition to the local chess tradition. Readers...are in for a treat." - The Boston Globe
"...the best chess blog (and I mean it)..." - Chess News and Events
"Provocative and refreshing ... If blogs were dairy products, this would be the cream." - Sarah Beth
"...ever-excellent..." - Streatham & Brixton Chess Club
"I love your blog -- the postings are hilarious." - WFM Elizabeth Vicary
"...a goldmine! The Boylston Chess Club Weblog is a fantastic site. Not only is this a fantastic blog, but it is the premier site for chess blog links. You won't find anything better on the net." - Gambetto
"Love your blog by the by. I read it every day." - Don (Man de la Maza)
"...one of my absolute favorite chess blogs..." - BlueEyedRook
"BCC Weblog is 'Chess Blog Central.' ...you can find all the best chess blogs - and lot's of great posts that are very entertaining and informative (and often very witty and amusing)." - Rook Van Winkle
"Alex Cherniack's A Knight's Tale... [is the] ...best chess article I've seen so far this year." - The Chess Mind
"...the guru of the chess blogosphere..." - Chessdom
"...dinâmico e importante blogue..." - Ala de Rei
"...the Boylston blog keeps me informed on local issues." - GM Larry Christiansen
"...I again marvel at the integrity and beauty and concision of your blog, so artfully done with Thoreauian economy of metre and form. Bravo." - DK transformation
"...the chess universe nexus..." - J'adoube
"...the Mother Ship." - Hisbestfriend
"There's a wonderland of chess material here." - OnlineChess.ca
"...one of the premier chessblogs in North America." - Chessdad64
"Chessninja, Boylston and Chessmind are the top 3 chess blogs." - Clint Ballard
"A Great Chess Blog" - Wagle’s World
"One of the best chess blogs on the net. It also holds the BEST link directory for other chess blogs on the net by far!... Must see!!!" - Gambetto chess blog links
One of USCL Commissioner Greg Shahade's top five chess-related websites.
"This blog is the top of the bill...for chess...outside the official news." - Logis
"Als je naar het centrum van het schaakblog universum wilt moet je bij de Boylston Chess Club zijn..." - Duveltje's Schaakweb
"...a punchy and well done blog..." - The 64 Square Jungle
"...surprised and pleased...to be linked to by this blog." - Maverick Philospher
"Good job breaking this [story] before ChessNinja and ChessBase!" - Howard Goldowsky
"The Boylston Chess Club's web blog ... is excellent. I highly recommend this site to any and all chess hounds." - Central Oregon Chess Journal
"...not just ... useful but also pleasurable to read..." - Chess Tyro
"The written word is still the most supple medium of communication, and DG wields it well. His coverage and analyses were superb." - Tom Panelas
"...really a good site and very extensive....a must to check out..." - Chessalee
"Me gusta este blog y me gustaría seguir viendo blogs de este estilo, donde los clubes aprovechen internet para darse a conocer." - Genios64
"GPCF Link of the Week" - Greater Peoria Chess Federation
"I have never been to the Boylston chess club, so I dont' know terribly much about it, but boy... can they do a website. I can't say enough good things about this site. It's ultimately one that with a) much more time; b) much more computer skills; and c) much more creativity, I would like this blog to emulate. I think it rivals (and thoroughly beats!) many of its more corporate/commercial competitors." - BlueEyedRook
"...really works hard at keeping us honest. Does that guy ... get any sleep or what?" - Pawn Sensei
"Keep up the good work here..." - Chess-In-Chicago Webmaster
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