FactGraph
listudy
FactGraph | listudy | |
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1 | 34 | |
1 | 264 | |
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0.0 | 4.5 | |
almost 5 years ago | 11 months ago | |
Elixir | ||
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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FactGraph
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What is your “I don't care if this succeeds” project?
I used to have a project like this. I was going to call it FactGraph: https://github.com/FactGraph/FactGraph/wiki
My idea was to build up a big community-maintained database containing facts and evidence, where everything is linked into a huge network. Everything would have a weight (sometimes automatically calculated from parent nodes), and the software would calculate probabilities for some big questions. Every user could also build their own personalized graph to explore their own worldview, and maybe even uncover some cognitive dissonance that they weren't aware of. Or you could use it to compare and contrast different philosophies, religions. Could even calculate a "coherence score" for each religion and denomination after crunching all of the available evidence.
Then I discovered RootClaim: https://www.rootclaim.com
They're doing something very similar, with a more targeted approach where they focus on some specific questions. e.g. COVID-19: https://www.rootclaim.com/analysis/what-is-the-source-of-cov...
RootClaim really seems to be nailing it so far, and hopefully they can continue to grow and become something like the project I was imagining.
listudy
- Listudy: Improve your chess skills with the help of spaced repetition
- Rebuilding Memchess.com from Its Archive
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How do you chess maniacs visualize the board so clearly?
It comes with experience. There is a website called listudy.org that has a section called “Blind Tactics” that might help with visualization.
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The Best Chess Resources 2nd Edition
Listudy: Memorise openings with spaced repetition. Chess Endgame Training Chessercise: Practice chess with YouTube. Chess Madra: Build and practise an opening repertoire. Aimchess: Learn your strengths and weaknesses.
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Opening Books Practice Partner
If you are trying to practice a certain opening, I would highly recommend listudy.org just to build that spaced repetition in your head.
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How do you memorize certain openings
I find https://listudy.org very useful for drilling lines. I don't see it mentioned often, but it allows you to import any lichess study (selfmade or other) into it and it'll pick a random line that's up to you to correctly play out until the end. Works very well if you do it enough
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I know slow time controls are best.. but what openings should I play to improve the fastest.
I use private Lichess Studies to store/build my repertoire. Start "choosing" your preferred responses to various opening moves and store them there. Start 1 move deep at a time and branch out slowly. At low level of play it's actually better to go just a few moves deep and have some canned responses to common bad moves from your opponents. You can import your lichess study into listudy.org which turns your saved opening prep into spaced repetition exercises to practice.
- How do I practice openings on lichess?
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A tool to memorize chess openings?
listudy.org
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FEATURE REKWEST - Lichess Opening Drills
Second, you can check out https://listudy.org which can do this with lichess studies.
What are some alternatives?
data_engineering_on_gcp_book - A book describing how to set up and maintain Data Engineering infrastructure using Google Cloud Platform.
lichobile - lichess.org mobile application
dali - Indie assembler/linker for Dalvik VM .dex & .apk files (Work In Progress)
exomind - A personal knowledge management tool hosted on your own personal cloud
decent-signal - A decent WebRTC signalling library.
stockfish.wasm - WebAssembly port of the strong chess engine Stockfish
noteworthy - Noteworthy is a collection of experimental meta-protocols for building, deploying and managing distributed overlay networks.
lila - ♞ lichess.org: the forever free, adless and open source chess server ♞
scraper - Nodejs web scraper. Contains a command line, docker container, terraform module and ansible roles for distributed cloud scraping. Supported databases: SQLite, MySQL, PostgreSQL. Supported headless clients: Puppeteer, Playwright, Cheerio, JSdom.
openingtree - Consolidated view of all your chess games from chess.com, lichess, grandmaster games or custom pgn.
Arthur - How to build your own AI art installation from scratch [Moved to: https://github.com/maxvfischer/DIY-ai-art]
Lila - ♞ lichess.org: the forever free, adless and open source chess server ♞ [Moved to: https://github.com/lichess-org/lila]