billywoods wrote:Charles Matthews wrote:the so-called "valuable resource" is indeed that - it's a huge chunk of the most significant game records, which for the most part existed previously on paper only. They have been digitised for you. This is the "legacy" that is going to make studying go significantly easier for the next generation. The complaint that it is in a "legacy format" - what do think it was in before?
I don't understand your objection in the slightest. Nobody is snubbing CD-ROMs - many modern computers are simply not built to accept them. The games themselves are a valuable resource. A CD-ROM, on the other hand, is as useless to me as a floppy disk or a roll of ticker tape, because I don't have a CD-ROM drive or the money to buy one. Unlike paper, they're not "legacy" - they're obsolete, and soon they'll be extinct.
(And somehow I think it's a gratuitous waste of time to spend countless thousands of hours digitising games to make them more widely available and useful, and then publish them only in a not very widely available, and so not very useful, format. It's none of my business, of course, but I'd have thanked anyone who told me that CDs were obsolete and jumped at the chance to make my product more widely available, whereas the reaction that Toge and I have had is somewhat different. I can't help but find this rather confusing.)
OK, you have had your answer: a polite request to purchase on a memory stick would have done something for you.
As for the rest, 0/10 for attitude. Server go may come to you, but for the rest (NB that server go is the blind leading the blind to some extent) you may have to meet it half way. A trip to Asia; or puzzling out material written in a foreign language ... need I go on? There is nothing at all that says that the information you need about go will automatically be available in English, explained at your current level, and in a format that happens to match the hardware you currently have.
GoGoD doesn't charge a commercial price for its product, you know. (The people who sell you machines very much do that.) I think, in return, you could at least try to be polite and appreciative. If you are confused by being told that the "market" is not the driver, and is not going to be the driver, for the global development of go, so much the better. You might then start to wonder what is.