Ellyster wrote:
Go, the 4th most searched entry in the Spanish wikipedia (2012) (with almost 6.5 million visits).
wat. How is this possible :S. Neither the language or the verb should be that high up.
In the Spanish wikipedia "Go" is actually the "Go Game" entry, not a general page like in the English version. And of course there is no entry for the verb "To Go".
Or the image isn't accurate, or some Go player just felt like pointing a botnet at that page to increase its popularity. I'm interested in the source of those numbers.
We don't know who we are; we don't know where we are.
Each of us woke up one moment and here we were in the darkness.
We're nameless things with no memory; no knowledge of what went before,
No understanding of what is now, no knowledge of what will be.
Some googling points to Johan Gunnarsson as the source of the wikipedia most viewed pages. He has this trends tool, doesn't show yearly but monthly/weekly/daily. Go is number 6 this month in Spanish http://toolserver.org/~johang/wikitrend ... month.html and a whooping number 3 in Turkish.
According to this page, Go was the 328th most viewed page in the last week, ahead of things like the Super Bowl (348th), Twitter (379th), YouTube (408th), and chess (2962nd).
Tonight we’ll leave these chains behind
Shed the skin from another moment in our lives
We’ll turn our faces to the frozen sun
So take my hand
Chase the sky and watch it burn
Waiting for the world to turn
Lamb wrote:According to this page, Go was the 328th most viewed page in the last week, ahead of things like the Super Bowl (348th), Twitter (379th), YouTube (408th), and chess (2962nd).
Lamb wrote:According to this page, Go was the 328th most viewed page in the last week, ahead of things like the Super Bowl (348th), Twitter (379th), YouTube (408th), and chess (2962nd).
While looking for a little info on Daniel Barry and Koichi Wakata (the astronauts who played Go on the space shuttle) I unexpectedly came across this photo from an online US archive. In case you ever wondered what the custom-made paper and foam go set looked like!
daniel_barry_and_koichi_wakata_play_go_in_space.jpg (131.46 KiB) Viewed 14772 times
oren wrote:I was able to see this set in the museum at the Nihon Kiin. It's a very unimpressive set, but it was used for a very cool activity.
It just proves my point. Weak/boring players have the nicest Go sets. The stronger/more interesting the player, the crappier the board
Well... True to a point, I would say, the stronger the player the less distracting the set
The strongest players I knew didn't even HAVE a set, they'd borrow an mdf board from the club if they needed it for whatever reason (another strong player staying over their house, etc)