I believe this sort of feel you have of the position develops from two things, experience from playing thousands of games analyzing them seeing the position unfold and from watching high level players do the same much better learning from them. Very good video praise from sweden.
11:10 In general, you can't wait though. Classical play has limited interest anymore. So it's invariably all rapid+ play we're talking about. Not sure what time control this game had. But for the average online player, you are typically tasked with pressing action and taking risks. Hence, you don't get much of a chance to develop greater chops that typically comes only from playing a lot of classical games. 16:30 Yep. Sometimes it's one thing. And sometimes...in a very (seemingly) similar situation...it's decidedly NOT that thing! I think the thing that isn't appreciated enough in human analysis is the vast possibility space of chess. Yes, everyone knows it's a big number. But they simply struggle to fully understand the extent of subtleties that exist in that space. And those subtleties elude rule of the thumb approaches/solutions. This is where engines lead people astray. Human play is it's own (low level) kind of play. No one can pull off engine play. We will forever bumble along thinking we've learned something insightful...something robust. Often though, it's nothing but an edge case. And you can only find that out by seeing it lead you astray as you continue moving forward. It's irritating af. Yet we persist. Believing just a couple more insights will do the trick in breaking to new highs. Meanwhile, the possibility space of chess just laughs its ass off at our insanity.
The last few seconds of your speaking are always cut off. It's not a big deal, but the videos usually end with "Thank you for." The like and subscribe screen is pasted over "watching" and whatever other words you say. I'm just mentioning it in case nobody else has! Thanks for the videos.
I believe this sort of feel you have of the position develops from two things, experience from playing thousands of games analyzing them seeing the position unfold and from watching high level players do the same much better learning from them. Very good video praise from sweden.
Prioritizing threats and opportunities. Like in life. Big hug to my man, Sune.
Thank you Sune!
11:10 In general, you can't wait though. Classical play has limited interest anymore. So it's invariably all rapid+ play we're talking about. Not sure what time control this game had. But for the average online player, you are typically tasked with pressing action and taking risks. Hence, you don't get much of a chance to develop greater chops that typically comes only from playing a lot of classical games.
16:30 Yep. Sometimes it's one thing. And sometimes...in a very (seemingly) similar situation...it's decidedly NOT that thing! I think the thing that isn't appreciated enough in human analysis is the vast possibility space of chess. Yes, everyone knows it's a big number. But they simply struggle to fully understand the extent of subtleties that exist in that space. And those subtleties elude rule of the thumb approaches/solutions. This is where engines lead people astray. Human play is it's own (low level) kind of play. No one can pull off engine play. We will forever bumble along thinking we've learned something insightful...something robust. Often though, it's nothing but an edge case. And you can only find that out by seeing it lead you astray as you continue moving forward. It's irritating af. Yet we persist. Believing just a couple more insights will do the trick in breaking to new highs. Meanwhile, the possibility space of chess just laughs its ass off at our insanity.
The last few seconds of your speaking are always cut off. It's not a big deal, but the videos usually end with "Thank you for." The like and subscribe screen is pasted over "watching" and whatever other words you say. I'm just mentioning it in case nobody else has! Thanks for the videos.
16:23 whats the book ?
"The most important thing" by Howard Marks (it's a book about investment)
@@keedt oh ok tnx. I was hoping it was a chess book 😀
kunne være fedt, hvis du gik tilbage og kiggede videre på dette teama, kritiske øjeblikke og planer..
fed gennemgang