women playing go
I am a fan of the
game of go (also named WeiChi or WeiQi in China and Baduk in Korea).
If you are interested about go in France,
check also the site of the
French Go Federation.
Or spend some time in the
rec.games.go newsgroup.
You can see some very nice pictures of me playing go
here.
I maintained (up to Sept 8th 2001) the rating list of the French Go Federation. Here is the algorithm description for the ratings computation, including a comparison with other algorithms. French tournament results should be sent to echelle@jeudego.org in one of the standard formats. The latest rating list is here. (More details for French players are on the French version of this page.)
I participated in the creation of a website and cdrom (in French) introduction to the game of go, in particular the sections on go programs and professional games.
I created the Go Teaching Ladder which allows you to give or receive comments on go games. On Unix, you can use cgoban or xgoban to go through the reviews. Read these hints to view the reviews automatically from your browser. This xgoban patch uses a nice wooden board if your system has the xpm libraries. Executables of xgoban are available here for Linux and Solaris.
I maintain the archives of the
computer-go
mailing list in
this directory, files
compgo-mail-*.Z. Please read the archives before posting to the list.
A search engine for these archives is
here.
Instructions for subscribing to the list are given
here.
dwarfs playing go
The IP address of IGS has changed. Add to your resource file:
*site: 210.146.253.13 or: *site: igs.joyjoy.netor start xgospel with:
xgospel -site igs.joyjoy.net
Binaries of xgospel are available here. For Linux, take the version with libXaw.6!
Other client programs are available
here.
marionette
See here my last games with Handltak 9610 at 12, 13, 14, 16, 17 and 20 stones. Here is my first game with Handtalk 9806, at 17 stones with Chinese style handicap. See here a game between Handtalk and two German dan players at 19 stones, one game between Handtalk and an IGS 2d player at 20 stones, and one game with a 1d player (IGS 3k) at 25 stones. Handtalk lost all these games. (Read the hints first to view these games from your browser.) Handltak is sold by Yutopian, and by Het Paard in Europe. A free 9x9 version is distributed by Yutopian.
Go++ is now the strongest of all programs. It won the 1999 ING cup by beating all its opponents, including Handtalk. Here is a game I won against Go4++ (the 1998 version of Go++) at 17 stones with Chinese style handicap; Go4++ plays rather well except for a few costly mistakes. To see how much Go++ has improved since, here is a game at 9 stones, which I lost by 3.5 points in May 2003.
Many Faces of Go is not as strong as Handtalk or Go++, but it is a good program for learning go thanks to its nice user interface and go tutorial. A free 9x9 version is available as Igowin. Igowin considered me as 4 dan (very strong amateur) after losing at 3 stones, which is unfortunately highly inflated. Here is a game won by Martin Mueller (5d) against Many Faces at 29 stones.
TurboGo is a shareware
program for Windows95, much weaker than Handtalk and Go++. (TurboGo does not
recognize that groups with a single eye are dead.) The DOS version is freeware
but even weaker. My only game with TurboGo 4.0 (at 9 stones since the
program does not handle larger handicaps) is
here.
[画像:go scene]
ht2sgf file.ght file.sgf.
The following patch to
sgf2misc creates a converter from SGF format to the GO format
(a variant of the Ishi format). Here are executables for
MSDOS and Linux. To use
them:
sgf2go < file.sgf> file.go
For Linux, the resulting .go file must be converted to MSDOS CR/LF
format. This can be done with flip -m. The shell script
sgf2gos automates this.
I replayed this game live on IGS on Jan 13rd and 14th, 1999. Thanks to the Yomiuri Shimbun for allowing live retransmission of this game. Read there an interesting report about the Cho-Kobayashi rivalry in the Kisei. The results of the other games are here.
[画像:stones] Thanks to Zjev Ambagts, the Fine Art Museums of San Francisco and Ken Warkentyne for the images of go players.