Hi,
I released a new version rc8 with the Stoyko exercise (see in the
training section). It is certainly buggy and unpolished, but the
features are there.
There is some help by pressing F1.
Feedbacks, suggestions and comments are welcome.
Pascal
---
Alexander Wagner, sobota, 1 grudnia 2007:
> >> C4: Position shouldn't be hopeless or completely won at
> >> depth C: best move cannot be losing and 2nd best move
> >> cannot be clearly winning.
> >>
> >> By running such search with predefined depths, we should
> >> be able to find both simple tac
pgeorges schrieb:
Hi!
C4: Position shouldn't be hopeless or completely won at
depth C: best move cannot be losing and 2nd best move
cannot be clearly winning.
[...]
>> I think C4 is Michaels way to prevent too tactical
>> positions.
>> The line, even if forced, has been filte
Alexander Wagner a écrit :
> pgeorges schrieb:
>
> Hi!
>
> >> C4: Position shouldn't be hopeless or completely won at
> >> depth C: best move cannot be losing and 2nd best move
> >> cannot be clearly winning.
> >>
> >> By running such search with predefined depths, we should
> >> be able to find bo
pgeorges schrieb:
Hi!
>> C4: Position shouldn't be hopeless or completely won at
>> depth C: best move cannot be losing and 2nd best move
>> cannot be clearly winning.
>>
>> By running such search with predefined depths, we should
>> be able to find both simple tactical exercises (low A and
Michal Rudolf a écrit :
> What you may need for doing that is a decent set of exercises. It is not that
> easy to obtain. There are some free tactical exercises in PGN, but they are
> usually either well known or not too sound.
>
> It will be nice to be able to find such excercises automatically
What you may need for doing that is a decent set of exercises. It is not that
easy to obtain. There are some free tactical exercises in PGN, but they are
usually either well known or not too sound.
It will be nice to be able to find such excercises automatically in Scid.
Idea is like that:
1. S
Alexander Wagner a écrit :
> pgeorges schrieb:
>
> Hi!
>
> >> pgeorges schrieb:
> >>
> >> Good Morning!
> >>
> >>> At
> >>> http://mywebpages.comcast.net/danheisman/Articles/Exercises.html
> >>> the stoyko exercise is explained (para 3.1). At
> >>> http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=42
pgeorges schrieb:
Hi!
>> pgeorges schrieb:
>>
>> Good Morning!
>>
>>> At
>>> http://mywebpages.comcast.net/danheisman/Articles/Exercises.html
>>> the stoyko exercise is explained (para 3.1). At
>>> http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=4273 the
>>> first paragraph describes how
Hi Alexander,
Alexander Wagner a écrit :
> pgeorges schrieb:
>
> Good Morning!
>
> > At
> > http://mywebpages.comcast.net/danheisman/Articles/Exercises.html
> > the stoyko exercise is explained (para 3.1). At
> > http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=4273 the
> > first paragraph describe
pgeorges schrieb:
Good Morning!
> At
> http://mywebpages.comcast.net/danheisman/Articles/Exercises.html
> the stoyko exercise is explained (para 3.1). At
> http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=4273 the
> first paragraph describes how this training method is
> implemented in Fritz
Hi,
At http://mywebpages.comcast.net/danheisman/Articles/Exercises.html
the stoyko exercise is explained (para 3.1).
At http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=4273
the first paragraph describes how this training method is implemented in
Fritz 11.
I wonder if this method is really useful
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