ez4u wrote:In my case I inevitably get 100 miles down the road but have absolutely no idea whether I locked the front door when I left. No Mind? Been there, did that!?
FTFY
ez4u wrote:In my case I inevitably get 100 miles down the road but have absolutely no idea whether I locked the front door when I left. No Mind? Been there, did that!?
RBerenguel wrote:ez4u wrote:In my case I inevitably get 100 miles down the road but have absolutely no idea whether I locked the front door when I left. No Mind? Been there, did that!?
FTFY
ez4u wrote:RBerenguel wrote:ez4u wrote:In my case I inevitably get 100 miles down the road but have absolutely no idea whether I locked the front door when I left. No Mind? Been there, did that!?
FTFY
No, not really!
HermanHiddema wrote:
I think you're missing RBerenguel's joke here.
I've been looking more at Cho Chikun because in my games I've been adopting a territorial style and I thought Cho might be a good one to look to for "advice."
John Fairbairn wrote:I have no idea whether daal fits into either camp, but Cho Chikun certainly does not. In his recent book (which we can assume had a lot of his own input because of the liberal use of "I") he first distances himself from two common preconceptions: (1) that taking territory makes you thin and you end up making the opponent thick and (2) josekis typically end up with a split between profit and thickness, and then he explains how the flaws in that thinking lead him to the notion that "taking territory is thick".
Kirby wrote:My thought was that he changed ez4u's exclamatory statement to a question since the subject of ez4u's comment was that he'd question whether or not he'd actually done something (eg. locked the front door). In the same manner, making his statement as a question, perhaps, adds uncertainty to the statement, indicating that he's not even sure if he really did it...
Maybe someone with a better sense of humor has a more elegant interpretation.
HermanHiddema wrote:Yeah, I had roughly the same interpretation as Kirby.
Perhaps "Been there, done that!" expresses rather more certainty than warranted if you're not always sure whether you locked the door a few hours ago, so RBerenguel jokingly changed it to "Been there, did that?!" to reflect that.
oren wrote:John Fairbairn wrote:I have no idea whether daal fits into either camp, but Cho Chikun certainly does not. In his recent book (which we can assume had a lot of his own input because of the liberal use of "I") he first distances himself from two common preconceptions: (1) that taking territory makes you thin and you end up making the opponent thick and (2) josekis typically end up with a split between profit and thickness, and then he explains how the flaws in that thinking lead him to the notion that "taking territory is thick".
What book is this? I can't find any recent books by Cho Chikun. Maybe a 2005 Mycom book?
John Fairbairn wrote:
I see Cho and territorial paired quite often, but I think there's a fundamental misperception here. At least I do see many weaker players acting like cattle ranchers in the Wild West, rushing to stake out claims and boasting "this is mine, all mine, as far as the eye can see and then down to Rio Grande". This is what they seem to think of as a territorial style. Others, a little more prudent, just concentrate on playing in the corners and on the third line, but they likewise think of this as territorial.
Kirby wrote:As a side note, I have heard that, to be a good territorial player, it is important to have a very precise ability to evaluate what is happening in the game at any given point in time.
What book is this? I can't find any recent books by Cho Chikun. Maybe a 2005 Mycom book?
John Fairbairn wrote:daal wrote:I've been looking more at Cho Chikun because in my games I've been adopting a territorial style and I thought Cho might be a good one to look to for "advice."
I see Cho and territorial paired quite often, but I think there's a fundamental misperception here. At least I do see many weaker players acting like cattle ranchers in the Wild West, rushing to stake out claims and boasting "this is mine, all mine, as far as the eye can see and then down to Rio Grande". This is what they seem to think of as a territorial style. Others, a little more prudent, just concentrate on playing in the corners and on the third line, but they likewise think of this as territorial.
I have no idea whether daal fits into either camp, but Cho Chikun certainly does not.