I say unto you, that likewise joy shall be in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, more than over ninety and nine just persons, which need no repentance.
Not that that particularly helps.....
I say unto you, that likewise joy shall be in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, more than over ninety and nine just persons, which need no repentance.
Not that that particularly helps.....
Oh God, yes! I'm old enough to remember when people thought it was important to have quiet and privacy to think.
I used to love my job. All my life I've loved programming, and I used to love being able to solve other people's problems for them by doing the thing I love.
The open-plan curse killed it for me. For years I've done as little paid work as I can get away with because I hate trying to think in an open-plan horror so much. It's like having my brain in a blender.
I still program, and think, a lot, but I only do it for other people when I need the money.
Wakarimasen, Toronaga-san!
It's wonderful! There was a terrific BBC TV series when I was a boy which inspired me to read the book, which is even better.
Clavell wrote several other books, all great, but Shogun is the masterpiece.
Oh that's nice, thanks, looks like if I can figure out how to submit a form from anki I'll be home and dry....
I can feel some python coming on...
Yes, I'm confused about why engines play so badly in endgames.
If you start them off a piece down then that's presumably a theoretically lost position, but they don't just make random moves because it doesn't matter...
What is it about the endgame that means that they suddenly start to favour the move that drags the game out the longest rather than the move that allows their opponent the biggest chance to screw up?
And actually, they often don't even play the 'drag it out longest' move, they seem to just pick moves at random for no reason.
And that means that I can often beat stockfish in positions which I have no idea how to win against someone who hasn't given up.
Maia does seem to fix this. She plays well in the endgame.
I wonder if it's possible to layer the two things, so that if standard stockfish sees that all moves are equivalent, it can hand off to maia to choose which one to play rather than rolling dice?
Behold:
https://lichess.org/?user=maia9#friend
maia9 is a chess bot who plays in a human style. She keeps whacking me in positions where I can beat actual stockfish easily. Just what I wanted. Thank you iceman on reddit.
That's a nice app! Free and open source, and now a permanent addition to my phone. Thank you!
I can't tell you whether it solves my problem because it won't let me set up a position where I know that standard stockfish runs away, but I played with it for half an hour and it doesn't show that behaviour in the games I played.
Nice, thank you! Also kudos to lemmy in general for providing a useful answer before reddit's r/chess did!! Maybe there is hope!
I knew it!
I personally like to use really really bright LED lights pointed straight into the eyes of oncoming traffic.
Occasionally an oncoming car will take a swipe, or a cyclist will stop and punch me, but it's well worth it for the widespread misery I can effortlessly cause.
It also makes it quite hard to see anything that isn't in my 'cone of death', which is good in the same way that peril-sensitive sunglasses are!
Imagine living in a place where you could see the stars at night.