John Fairbairn wrote:none of the western books explain the fuseki well
For dan level opening understanding, I agree that there is still a big gap in Western literature.
John Fairbairn wrote:none of the western books explain the fuseki well
John Fairbairn wrote:I did offer to do a book based on this series to a publisher, but as next to nobody buys go books nowadays it was stillborn.
SoDesuNe wrote:If your start-up capital is not reached
RobertJasiek wrote:SoDesuNe wrote:If your start-up capital is not reached
Go books publication does not need start-up capital any longer in the age of digital printing. Capital is useful to slightly reduce average printing cost though.
SoDesuNe wrote:John Fairbairn wrote:I did offer to do a book based on this series to a publisher, but as next to nobody buys go books nowadays it was stillborn.
Did you ever considered trying to publicly fund those book projects? Websites like kickstarter.com seem to have the finger on the pulse. If your start-up capital is not reached you only lose the time, that went into presenting your idea.
I would immediately pre-order. How many orders would you need to make it viable?
Fuseki will test your intuition and experience.
If you can not decide which board position is better, then you are lost.
therfore you need to have experience to have intutition so you can analyze the position correctly.
John Fairbairn wrote:daal wrote:I would immediately pre-order. How many orders would you need to make it viable?
Replies like this, and also suggestions to use SmartGo, kickstart, and the other ideas miss the point, and after a while it becomes depressing.
Depressing? Sorry. I wanted to be encouraging. I was trying to indicate that I assume that besides myself, many many people would be interested in such a book. Like a psychological boost in advance. I understand that you don't see much value in squeezing through tiny hoops to write more books, but it's not like nobody would appreciate it if you did.
John Fairbairn wrote:The fact is go books currently attract not much more than 100 people
Kirby wrote:The difficult part about using "experience and intuition" in the fuseki - or in general - is that your evaluation's correctness cannot be proven. This can be contrasted to localized life and death patterns in which every branch can be enumerated for correctness, and a result can be proven to be true.
oren wrote:Kirby wrote:The difficult part about using "experience and intuition" in the fuseki - or in general - is that your evaluation's correctness cannot be proven. This can be contrasted to localized life and death patterns in which every branch can be enumerated for correctness, and a result can be proven to be true.
Isn't that a good thing about go? If the fuseki algorithm was 'proven', would we all just have virtually the same games over and over?