If you follow chess, you know that kids dont learn from chess books anymore. They just study with the engine on their phone. The mobile engine so powerful they already know they will never beat it.
That's our future for learning anything.
If you follow chess, you know that kids dont learn from chess books anymore. They just study with the engine on their phone. The mobile engine so powerful they already know they will never beat it.
That's our future for learning anything.
I saw this 3 year old kid playing 18th century chess theory, i think he was from India. New styles of play also help, like fischer random
Youtube + engine review. All you need. Chess is fascinating in that it always seems ahead of the curve with really important things like man's relationship with computers (Kasparov vs Deep Blue being highly symbolic as the moment mankind started to "lose" to AI), and as you point out, how people learn but also how people interact with one another (all online now)
Indeed.