jalda

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
 

The FIDE World Cup was a complete success, as top players fought for spots in the Candidates, both in the open and in the women’s section. Magnus Carlsen and Aleksandra Goryachkina were the winners. As ever, GM Karsten Müller compiled the most interesting positions from the tournaments. Find here five instructive endgames from the open category! | Pictured: Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu | Photo: Stev Bonhage

 

GMs Magnus Carlsen and Alireza Firouzja will throw down in the Division I Winners Final of the 2023 Julius Baer Generation Cup.

[–] jalda@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

Round 5

Standings

Rank Team Round BP MP
1 WR Chess 5 24 10
2 Team MGD1 5 21 9
3 Armenia 5 20.5 8
4 Germany and Friends 5 19 8
5 Chess Pensioners 5 18 7
6 Berlin Chess Federation 5 17.5 7
7 Freedom 5 17.5 7
8 ASV AlphaEchecs Linz 5 20.5 6
9 Kompetenzakademie Allstars 5 19.5 6
10 Chessbrah OFM 5 19 6
11 Rishon LeZion Chess Club 5 18.5 6
12 Six-pack 5 18.5 6
13 Columbus Energy KingsOfChess Kraków 5 17.5 6
14 Team Chessemy.com 5 16.5 6
15 Ukrainian Amators 5 13.5 6
16 Ashdod Elit Chess Club 5 16 5
17 Schachverein Hemer 5 16 5
18 Düsseldorfer Schachklub 1914/25 e.V 5 15 5
19 Aachener Schachverein von 1856 5 14.5 5
20 Deutsche Schachjugend 1 5 14.5 5
21 FIDE Management Board 5 15 4
22 Africa 5 14 4
23 Chess Wizzards 5 13 4
24 Neustadt Weinstraße 5 12.5 4
25 Mitropa Chess Association 5 12.5 4
26 Wensing & Pöbel 5 11.5 4
27 Kenya Commercial Bank Chess Club 5 11 4
28 École Polytechnique Française de Lausanne 5 13 3
29 The Sharks 5 12.5 3
30 Doppelbauer Kiel 5 12.5 3
31 PhileKhoob Chess Club 5 12 3
32 Heilbronn Hustlers 5 11.5 3
33 Blerickse Schaakvereniging 5 11.5 3
34 MagdeBurg and Friends 5 6.5 2
35 Deutsche Schachjugend 2 5 5.5 2
36 Unischach Bayreuth 5 8.5 1

[–] jalda@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

One important piece of information is that Magnus Carlsen has confirmed (once again) that he has no intention to play the Candidates, so the other three semifinalists, including underdog Nijat Abasov, should be directly qualified for the Candidates.

 

Recap of the games of Hikaru Nakamura, Magnus Carlsen, Gukesh D, Fabiano Caruana and Pragg

 

18-year-old Azerbaijani GM Aydin Suleymanli won an epic match as Magnus Carlen and Hikaru Nakamura prepare to join the 2023 World Chess Cup.

[–] jalda@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

Begun, the AdBlocker Wars have.

[–] jalda@kbin.social 8 points 1 year ago

I mean, in Reddit all your posts and comments are auto-upvoted.

[–] jalda@kbin.social 20 points 1 year ago (4 children)

From the infamous AMA: We’ll continue to be profit-driven until profits arrive. Unlike some of the 3P apps, we are not profitable.

To me it sounds that he is envious that 3rd party apps were profitable and Reddit isn't.

[–] jalda@kbin.social 6 points 1 year ago

The word you're looking for is sustainable, not profitable

[–] jalda@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

Some people, like Elon Musk, want us to believe that social networks are a "digital town square", but imo that's a pretty poor metaphor. Social networks are more similar to "digital pubs". They are places where you go to meet, chat and share with your people. Of course it is a public place, and anyone can listen to your conversations, and in principle, even join. But social networks, as pubs, and as any other human interaction, are governed by (mostly unwritten) social contracts, codes of conduct and etiquette. You are not supposed to join a conversation uninvited, and if you are invited, you are supposed to treat the others with respect.

However, these groups systematically and purposely violate the social contracts, they hijack spaces and conversation where they were not invited and insult, harass and harm anyone who doesn't think like them or simply if they find it funny. They are the drunkards that instigate bar fights. And as in real life, the owners don't want disruptive elements in their pubs.

At this point, the Internet is 40 years old, and mass-adoption happened more than 20 years ago. Most of us have been part of many communities before lemmy and/or kbin. And the disruptive elements are always the same. There are many groups of people with different opinions on religion, social issues, economical policies, etc, and yet only the far-right insists on the on-line persecution of their opponents. And their strategy works as long as the apologist support them.

This isn't a matter of echo chambers. You can hear many different voices on lemmy/kbin. The only requirement to have you voice heard is basic respect, and that is something that the far-right refuses to do.

[–] jalda@kbin.social 4 points 1 year ago

Antichess, the truly anarchic variant, where en passant is really forced

[–] jalda@kbin.social 19 points 1 year ago (2 children)

You still haven't addressed my point. Do you think it is desiderable that homosexual people are beaten to a pulp? Is a YES/NO question, it shouldn't be difficult to answer.

[–] jalda@kbin.social 28 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Whatever, I copied your whole paragraph in another comment, and the context is pretty clear for anyone who cares to read it. I didn't claim that you personally were threatening to do the beating, only that you thought that the beating was desiderable for the "program of western civilization". If you really don't want homosexual people to be beaten to a pulp, then you should seriously reconsider how you express your ideas.

[–] jalda@kbin.social 63 points 1 year ago (23 children)

You are longing for the times when "Homosexuals were regularly taken outside and beaten to a pulp". Isn't this hateful?

[–] jalda@kbin.social 47 points 1 year ago (10 children)

I don't usually go to through other people's comment history, but this one is a goldmine

"It made sense back when everyone was, more or less, on board with the program of western civilization. We may not all have been Christian back then, but almost all of us were, and everyone supported Judeo-Christian values without question. Homosexuals were regularly taken outside and beaten to a pulp, so it was extremely rare for anyone to think such behavior was acceptable. At this point we need to ask ourselves what the purpose of freedom is. Are we a free people so we can exercise perverted pleasures of the flesh, the slaughter of innocent babies, and genital mutilation of children without their parents knowledge? If you answer "yes", you just might be repeating the whisper of a demon."

"woke neo-marxism claims that any normal person is bad. That means its practitioners openly discriminate against conservative white Christian men, especially if they practice heterosexual behavior in a traditional marriage."

"Ironically, secession is about the most American thing we could do at this point"

3
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by jalda@kbin.social to c/chess@lemmy.ml
 

Format

This tournament is a double round-robin between 6 teams of six players each, and the two best teams qualify to final phase. Each team is composed by one "icon" on board 1, two male players on boards 2 and 3, two female players on boards 4 and 5, and one junior on board 6.

Scoring

Each game is scored according to:

  • Win with black: 4 Game Points (GPs)
  • Win with white: 3 GPs
  • Draw: 1 GP
  • Loss: 0 GPs

The match is scored according to:

  • Team that scores most GPs: 3 Match Points (MPs)
  • Team that scores the same as rivals: 1 MPs
  • Team that scores fewer: 0 MPs

After the double round-robin ends, the two teams with most MPs qualify to the final. The final is a best of two match, with a blitz game as tiebreaker.

Time Controls

Rapid 15+10. Players cannot agree to a draw before 30 moves each.

Teams

Triveni Continental Kings (Avg Elo: 2613)

  1. GM Levon Aronian (USA, 2743)
  2. GM Yangyi Yu (China, 2734)
  3. GM Yi Wei (China, 2716)
  4. GM Kateryna Lagno (Russia, 2494)
  5. GM Nana Dzagnidze (Georgia, 2543)
  6. GM Jonas Buhl Bjerre (Denmark, 2535)

Chingari Gulf Titans (Avg Elo: 2628)

  1. GM Jan-Krzystof Duda (Poland, 2794)
  2. GM Shahriyar Mamedyarov (Azerbaijan, 2694)
  3. GM Daniil Dubov (Russia, 2727)
  4. GM Alexandra Kosteniuk (FIDE, 2524)
  5. IM Polina Shuvalova (Russia, 2357)
  6. GM Sarin Nihal (India, 2672)

SG Alpine Warriors (Avg Elo: 2589)

  1. GM Magnus Carlsen (Norway, 2829)
  2. GM Gukesh D (India, 2629)
  3. GM Arjun Erigasi (India, 2714)
  4. GM Irina Krush (USA, 2400)
  5. GM Elisabeth Paehtz (Germany, 2373)
  6. GM Praggnanandhaa R (India, 2587)

Balan Alaskan Knights (Avg Elo: 2600)

  1. GM Ian Nepomniachtchi (Russia, 2760)
  2. GM Nodirbek Abdusattorov (Uzbekistan, 2703)
  3. GM Teimour Radjabov (Azerbaijan, 2694)
  4. GM Zhongyi Tan (China, 2517)
  5. GM Nino Batsiashvili (Georgia, 2358)
  6. Raunak Sadhwani (India, 2567)

Ganges Grandmasters (Avg Elo: 2639)

  1. GM Viswanathan Anand (India, 2713)
  2. GM Richard Rapport (Romania, 2761)
  3. GM Leinier Domínguez Pérez (USA, 2706)
  4. GM Yifan Hou (China, 2540)
  5. GM Bela Khotenashvili (Georgia, 2414)
  6. Andrey Esipenko (FIDE, 2682)

Upgrad Mumba Masters (Avg Elo: 2611)

  1. GM Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (France, 2767)
  2. GM Alexander Grischuk (Russia, 2716)
  3. GM Santosh Gujrathi Vidit (India, 2665)
  4. GM Humpy Koneru (India, 2469)
  5. GM Dronavalli Harika (India, 2450)
  6. GM Javokhir Sindarov (Uzbekistan, 2596)

Today's Schedule

Round 1

22nd June 2023, 13:30 UTC

Triveni Continental Kings vs Upgrad Mumba Masters

Round 2

22nd June 2023, 14:50 UTC

Chingari Gulf Titans vs Ganges Grandmasters

Media

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