Monday, July 30, 2007

Computers and Poker

When the chips are down, computers can now beat humans at most cerebral and mechanical activities. They can fly planes, drive cars, arrange timetables, make lists and retrieve information better, more accurately and faster than we mere mortals. At chequers (draughts), computers have a program that cannot lose, and, at best, can be tied. Deep Blue, a supercomputer-based chess-playing software system, can trounce the world champion at chess. But humans still have one ace in the hole. And that is poker.

At an interspecies match at the University of Alberta, two professional high-rollers beat a gambling computer with the unusual nom de cartes of Polaris. They mocked their mechanical opponent’s play as “sick”, when the machine made an extraordinary or unusual action. They were playing Texas Hold ’Em heads-up limit poker. So the computer science professors are going back to their keyboards to try new algorithms and strategies. And even the ranks of nongamblers, who do not know their blue chips from the ace up their sleeves, can scarce forbear to up the ante.

For poker calls for two human qualities that cannot be reproduced mechanically: bluff and imagination. A poker face beats a computer screen every time. You can program your computer for different opponents or styles of play called “bots” in the trade, but you cannot prepare it for the forgotten factor of human orneriness. Statisticians said that if you gave a zillion chimpanzees a zillion keyboards, they would end up by tapping out the works of Shakespeare. Because of the internet we now know that this is not true. The failure of computers to call our bluff is conclusive evidence that we are still on the winning team. More in

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Khet Laser Game!


The Khet Laser game is an amazing board game that is like playing chess in a pyramid with lasers against a pharaoh (and we are not trying to send you to lu lu land here), chess is great but in this day an age when video games rule you need a board game with a twist and this is just what Khet is.

The Khet Laser game is said to be the first board game to incorporate laser technology and add to that the strategy and head bending fun then you have the ultimate mix.

If you love board games and gadgets then you will love this game as most of the pieces have a mirrored side to them to aid in the object of the game.
Which is to maneuver your pieces around the board so that when you ‘fire’ the laser from your corner, it bounces around the pieces on the board and ultimately ’strikes’ and lights up your opponents ‘Pharoh’ piece.

Khet Laser Game Features

  • Suitable for ages 9 years+
  • Suitable for two players
  • Contains two Class I lasers (of course do not intently stare into the laser beams).
  • The pieces have 2, 1 or no mirrored sides
  • Egyptian themed playing pieces; the Sacred Pharaoh, Djed column, Pyramid and Obelisk
  • An Egyptian themed game with pyramids and lasers

Product Page on iwantoneofthose

Harrypotters chess board!


Which house will you choose?
A Uniquely striking Harry Potter Hogwarts House Quidditch Chess set with the choice of playing the four Hogwarts houses. Choose your favorite Hogwarts house team, play Hufflepuss verses Slytherin, or Gryffindor verses Ravenclaw, or in any given combination.

All playing pieces for each house is included with each piece intricately die-cast and enameled in house colors, and stores neatly inside the game board. The superb quality game board itself is made of hardwood with 24k gold plated accents and measures 12 inches x 12 inches x 3 inches.

Thursday, July 5, 2007

FIVE BEST CHESS MOVIES

Critic Robert Basalla recommends five movies that feature chess less foolishly than most:

"Searching for Bobby Fischer." Basalla's favorite of many 1990s chess films hams up its true-life sources, but makes few outright blunders and captures the game's mystique.

"The Seventh Seal." Death plays black in Ingmar Bergman's often-parodied 1956 classic.

"The Luzhin Defence." A 2000 version of a Vladimir Nabokov novel about a eccentric chess player. (Is there any other kind?) "Dangerous Moves." This 1985 Oscar-winner from Switzerland shows the drama and strain of a championship showdown, but mistakes include English subtitles describing different moves than the dialogue.

"Knight Moves." Players fall faster than pawns in this 1993 killer thriller.

Shun this: "No Name on the Bullet." A player castles with his queen. Without a hint of humor, his opponent responds, "You play an interesting game."

To buy: "Chess in the Movies" (listed for $34.95 plus shipping), see www.amazon.com or www.uscf.org, or contact author Robert Basalla, swgcfwip@core.com.

Monday, June 25, 2007

Does Folic Acid Help Memory?


Extra Folic Acid May Help Memory!






High-dose folic acid pills - providing as much of the nutrient as 2.5 pounds of strawberries - might help slow the cognitive decline of aging.

So says a Dutch study that’s the first to show a vitamin could really improve memory.

The research, unveiled Monday at a meeting of Alzheimer’s researchers, adds to mounting evidence that a diet higher in folate is important for a variety of health effects. It’s already proven to reduce birth defects, and research suggests it helps ward off heart disease and strokes, too.

The new study doesn’t show folic acid could prevent Alzheimer’s - the people who tested the vitamin didn’t have symptoms of that disease.

But as people age, some decline in memory and other brain functions is inevitable. Taking 800 micrograms of folic acid a day slowed that brain drain, reported lead researcher Jane Durga of Wageningen University in the Netherlands.

In the study, 818 cognitively healthy people ages 50 to 75 swallowed either folic acid or a dummy pill for three years.

On memory tests, the supplement users had scores comparable to people 5.5 years younger, Durga said. On tests of cognitive speed, the folic acid helped users perform as well as people 1.9 years younger.

That’s significant brain protection, with a supplement that’s already well-known to be safe, said Johns Hopkins University neuroscientist Marilyn Albert, who chairs the Alzheimer’s Association’s science advisory council.

"I think I would take folic acid, assuming my doctor said it was OK," Albert said. "We know Alzheimer’s disease, the pathology, begins many, many years before the symptoms. We ought to be thinking about the health of our brain the same way we think about the health of our heart."

Indeed, there’s enough research now suggesting that there are ways to gird the brain against age-related memory loss and Alzheimer’s that the association has begun offering classes to teach people the techniques.

Exercise your brain. Using it in unusual ways increases blood flow and helps the brain wire new connections. That’s important to build up what’s called cognitive reserve, an ability to adapt to or withstand the damage of Alzheimer’s a little longer.

In youth, that means good education. Later in life, do puzzles, learn to play chess, take classes.

_Stay socially stimulated. Declining social interaction with age predicts declining cognitive function.

_Exercise your body. Bad memory is linked to heart disease and diabetes because clogged arteries slow blood flow in the brain.

Experts recommend going for the triple-whammy of something mentally, physically and socially stimulating all at once: Coach your child’s ball team. Take a dance class. Strategize a round of golf.

Diet’s also important. While Alzheimer’s researchers have long recommended a heart-healthy diet as good for the brain, Monday’s folic acid study is the first to test the advice directly.

Previous studies have shown that people with low folate levels in their blood are more at risk for both heart disease and diminished cognitive function.

Durga said it’s not clear how folic acid might work to protect the brain. Some studies suggest folate lowers inflammation; others suggest it may play a role in expression of dementia-related genes.

Folate is found in such foods as oranges and strawberries, dark-green leafy vegetables and beans. In the United States, it also is added to cereal and flour products. The recommended daily dose here is 400 micrograms; doctors advise women of childbearing age to take a supplement to ensure they get that much.

original story

Friday, June 15, 2007

Akshaye Khanna - Bollywood's new chess master

Once prolific Bengali filmmaker Satyajit Roy had made a film "Shatranj Ke Khiladi" in which Sanjeev Kumar and Sayeed Jafrey played nawabs addicted to the game of chess. But in reality Bollywood has its own 'shatranj ke khiladi' -- Akshaye Khanna.


He is currently shooting for Abbas Mastan's next project "Race" with Saif Ali Khan in Yash Raj Studio, where once during a break Akshaye pulled everybody from cast to crew to play chess with him.
The director duo was also not spared by his addiction.
On the sets of "Naqaab" too, in Dubai, he played chess every day with the unit members of the film and defeated all of them with his fast moves.
Abbas-Mastan's "Naqaab" is also a thriller where everybody plays a game with each other.
Full report
It would be very nice if our celebrities play exhibition matches to popularise this game among masses!!

Singapore chess title to Antonio

PATTAYA, Thailand—Filipino Grandmaster Rogelio “Joey” Antonio, the country’s highest-rated chess player, added yet another feather in his cap and brought another honor to the country following a successful campaign in the First Thomson CC Championship held June 9 and 10 at the Thomson Community Club, Thomson Road, Singapore.

Antonio, who flew here from Singapore to coach the national age-group champions currently seeing action in the 8th Asean Age-Group Championship at the Jamthien Thani Hotel here, scored five wins and two draws to clinch the championship in the seven-round, Swiss system tournament sponsored by the Jenjosh Group.

The two-day event drew more than a hundred participants, including five Filipinos, four of them based in Singapore.

Antonio, 45, a sergeant in the HHSG Unit of the Army led by commanding general, Lt. Gen. Romeo Tolentino, and whose stint here was supported by the Philippine Sports Commission, headed by chairman William “Butch” Ramirez, actually finished tied with fellow Filipino and newly minted International Master Julio Catalino Sadorra, but emerged the winner via a superior tiebreak.

report by Arman Armero
click here