| Community Blog Discussions - Using Lichess's Public Data To Find The Best Chess 960 Position#11 @dboing said in #10: > I think being a coder or data analyst is not an initiation requirement to think chess in light of such data analysis. So, I don't know about the op, but I for one would welcome … | rdubwiley |
| Community Blog Discussions - Using Lichess's Public Data To Find The Best Chess 960 Position#8 @dboing said in #7: > just a tip kind of question.. Is ipynb the same thing as juptier notebooks. or are they compatible (or minimal conversion rules)? > I have been used to their ancestors in mathema… | rdubwiley |
| Community Blog Discussions - Using Lichess's Public Data To Find The Best Chess 960 Position#6 @dboing said in #5: > thanks for providing the notebooks and intermediate results data, files (ipynb, txt, csv). I just noticed them. Should help those wanting to reproduce some of your results, witho… | rdubwiley |
| Community Blog Discussions - Using Lichess's Public Data To Find The Best Chess 960 Position#4 @BradyIsSystemQB said in #3: > Are these results even statistically significant? > > Even if all positions were equal, just by chance one of them wold have the worst performance over the sample, and a… | rdubwiley |
| Community Blog Discussions - Using Lichess's Public Data To Find The Best Chess 960 Position#1 Comments on https://lichess.org/@/rdubwiley/blog/using-lichesss-public-data-to-find-the-best-chess-960-position/GCpB9WLH | rdubwiley |