ReportWire

Tag: magnus carlsen

  • After 20 years at the top of chess, Magnus Carlsen is making his next move

    After 20 years at the top of chess, Magnus Carlsen is making his next move

    STAVANGER, Norway (AP) — Few chess players enjoy Magnus Carlsen’s celebrity status.

    A grand master at 13, refusing to play an American dogged by allegations of cheating, and venturing into the world of online chess gaming all made Norway’s Carlsen a household name.

    Few chess players have produced the magical commodity that separates Norway’s Magnus Carlsen from any of his peers: celebrity.

    Only legends like Russia’s Garry Kasparov and American Bobby Fischer can match his name recognition and Carlsen is arguably an even more dominant player. Last month, he beat both men to be named the International Chess Federation’s greatest ever.

    But his motivation to rack up professional titles is on the wane. Carlsen, 33, now wants to leverage his fame to help turn the game he loves into a spectator sport.

    “I am in a different stage in my career,” he told The Associated Press. “I am not as ambitious when it comes to professional chess. I still want to play, but I don’t necessarily have that hunger. I play for the love of the game.”

    Offering a new way to interact with the game, Carlsen on Friday launched his application, Take Take Take, which will follow live games and players, explaining matches in an accessible way that, Carlsen says, is sometimes missing from streaming platforms like YouTube and Twitch. “It will be a chiller vibe,” he says.

    Carlsen intends to use his experience to provide recaps and analysis on his new app, starting with November’s World Chess Championship tournament between China’s Ding Liren and India’s Gukesh Dommaraju. He won’t be competing himself because he voluntarily ceded the title in 2023.

    Carlsen is no novice when it comes to chess apps. The Play Magnus game, which he started in 2014, gave online users the chance to play against a chess engine modeled against his own gameplay. The company ballooned into a suite of applications and was bought for around $80 million in 2022 by Chess.com, the world’s largest chess website.

    Carlsen and Mats Andre Kristiansen, the chief executive of his company, Fantasy Chess, are betting that a chess game where users can follow individual players and pieces, filters for explaining different elements of each game, and light touch analysis will scoop up causal viewers put off by chess’s sometimes rarefied air. The free app was launched in a bid to build the user base ahead of trying to monetizing it. “That will come later, maybe with advertisements or deeper analysis,” says Kristiansen.

    While Take Take Take offers a different prospect with its streaming services, it is still being launched into a crowded market with Chess.com, which has more than 100 million users, YouTube, Twitch, and the website of FIDE the International Chess Federation. World Chess was worth around $54 million when it got listed on the London Stock Exchange.

    The accessibility of chess engines that can beat any human means cheating has never been easier. However, they can still be used to shortcut thousands of hours of book-bound research, and hone skills that would be impossible against human opponents.

    “I think the games today are of higher quality because preparation is becoming deeper and deeper and artificial intelligence is helping us play. It is reshaping the way we evaluate the games,” especially for the new generation of players, says Carlsen.

    At the same time, he admits that two decades after becoming a grand master, his mind doesn’t quite compute at the tornado speed it once did. “Most people have less energy when they get older. The brain gets slower. I have already felt that for a few years. The younger players’ processing power is just faster.”

    Even so, he intends to be the world’s best for many years to come.

    “My mind is a bit slower, and I maybe don’t have as much energy. But chess is about the coming together of energy, computing power and experience. I am still closer to my peak than decline,” he said.

    Chess has been cresting a popularity wave begun by Carlsen himself.

    He became the world’s top-ranked player in 2011. In 2013, he won the first of his five World Championships. In 2014, he achieved the highest-ever chess rating of 2882, and he has remained the undisputed world number one for the last 13 years.

    Off the table, chess influencers, like the world No. 2, Hikaru Nakamura, are using social media to bring the game to a wider audience. The Netflix series “The Queen’s Gambit” burnished chess’ unlikely cerebral sex appeal when it became one of the streamer’s biggest hits in 2020.

    And in 2022 Carlsen’s refusal to play against Hans Niemann, an American grand master, who admitted to using technology to cheat in online games in the past, created a rare edge in the usually sedate world of chess. There is no evidence Niemann ever cheated in live games but the feud between the pair propelled the game even further into public consciousness.

    Whether chess can continue to grow without the full professional participation of its biggest celebrity remains to be seen.

    Source link

  • Chinese Chess Champ Stripped Of Title After Taking A Dump In A Bathtub

    Chinese Chess Champ Stripped Of Title After Taking A Dump In A Bathtub

    When you accomplish something big, like winning a major tournament, how do you celebrate? Maybe you jump around in excitement, salty rivulets streaming down your face in a rush of emotions. Maybe you pop a bottle of champagne and spray it around like an NFL player after the Super Bowl. Or, if you’re a 48-year-old Xiangqi (Chinese chess) player who just won a major tourney, you could completely shun tradition and take a shit in a hotel bathroom, for celebration’s sake.

    According to reports from Business Insider and Global Times, Yan Chenglong beat an assortment of amateur Xiangqi players on December 17 in the Hainan Province. Stomping his competitors one by one, Chenglong was eventually crowned the “Xiangqi King” (Chinese chess champion) and awarded 100,000 yuan (approximately $14,150 USD) for his triumph. But the next morning, reportedly after a night of partying, staff at the hotel where players were staying said Chenglong defecated in the bathtub. It’s strange and gross, yes, but that’s not where the story ends. Far from it, actually.

    Of course, anal beads might’ve been involved

    After the incident, Chenglong’s victory was also called into question, particularly because of his behavior throughout the competition. As The Independent reports, Chinese social media posts accused him of “clenching and unclenching rhythmically” to share data about the chess board to a faraway computer via anal massaging device, which would then tell him which moves to make on the board. According to Business Insider, the device was allegedly found in the bathtub excrement by a hotel employee.

    Chenglong denied the accusations, though, saying he’d been playing high-level chess for over 40 years and that, on the morning of December 18, he suffered from diarrhea after drinking alcohol. According to Chenglong, he couldn’t make it to the toilet in time and simply opted for the bathtub because…I guess it was right there?

    The Chinese Xiangqi Association, the country’s chess overlords, responded on December 25 to the allegations against Chenglong, explaining that any investigation into his actions yielded little to no provable results.

    “Based on our understanding of the situation, it is currently impossible to prove that Yan engaged in cheating via ‘anal beads’ as speculated on social media,” the CXA said in a statement, according to The Guardian. “Yan consumed alcohol with others in his room on the night of the 17th, and then he defecated in the bathtub of the room he was staying in on the 18th, in an act that damaged hotel property, violated public order and good morals, had a negative impact on the competition and the event of Xiangqi, and was of extremely bad character.”

    The governing body stripped Chenglong of his championship belt, forced him to forfeit an undisclosed amount of his earnings, and disqualified him from participating in any Chinese chess competitions for one full year. Oof, now that’s a shitty punishment.

    Read More: YouTubers Put Anal Bead Chess Conspiracy To The Test

    This isn’t the first time anal beads have popped up in a chess cheating scandal. Over here in the States, Grandmaster Hans Niemann was accused of using a rectal insertable to beat World Champion Magnus Carlsen in a shocking upset in September 2022. Niemann has denied the cheating allegations profusely, resulting in a lawsuit between to the two players that was ultimately settled in August 2023. It’s ridiculous, but apparently, people will do anything and everything to get the W.

    Levi Winslow

    Source link

  • Chess World’s ‘Anal Bead’ Cheating Saga Quietly Comes To An End

    Chess World’s ‘Anal Bead’ Cheating Saga Quietly Comes To An End

    It felt like this day might never come, but former world champion Magnus Carlsen and grandmaster Hans Niemann have finally put the cheating scandal that rocked the chess world last year, including meme-filled speculation about anal beads, to bed.

    Chess.com and Carlsen reached a settlement with Niemann, who had sued them and Twitch streamer Hikaru Nakamura for $100 million over what he alleged was a “civil conspiracy” to defame him. “We are pleased to report that we have reached an agreement with Hans Niemann to put our differences behind us and move forward together without further litigation,” Chess.com wrote in an update on August 28. As a result, Niemann will once again be allowed to compete on the online chess platform, and Carlsen has agreed to play him in the future should they meet in a tournament.

    “I acknowledge and understand Chess.com’s report, including its statement that there is no determinative evidence that Niemann cheated in his game against me at the Sinquefield Cup,” Carlsen said in a statement. “I am willing to play Niemann in future events, should we be paired together.”

    It was the former world champion’s remarks that initially set the largest cheating scandal in the modern era of the game in motion. After losing to Niemann in a shocking upset during the early stages of the August 2022 Sinquefield Cup, Carlsen resigned from the tournament completely, and tweeted out a Jose Mourinho meme implying Niemann had cheated.

    The accusations took chess message boards and Twitch communities by storm, with viewers in the Chessbrah Twitch chat joking that maybe Niemann had used anal beads to communicate with someone sending him the best moves from the outside using an AI chess engine. Anal beads became a running joke, not because there was any evidence they were ever used, but precisely because there was never any evidence that Niemann ever actually cheated, let alone how he would have managed to, given the Sinquefield Cup’s strict security. It even became the basis for an entire episode of It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia.

    It was all fun and games until Carlsen doubled-down on his allegations in September and Chess.com released a 72-page report in October accusing Niemann of cheating in several matches played on the website. Niemann fired back with a $100 million lawsuit accusing Carlsen of leveraging his “media empire” and partnerships with Chess.com to try and get Niemann blacklisted from tournaments and shunned from the professional chess world.

    A federal judge tossed out Niemann’s lawsuit in June, but he tried to appeal the decision and now the two sides have settled. While Chess.com said it stands by its previous report, it also admits that there is no “determinative evidence” that Niemann ever cheated in any in-person games.

    “I am pleased that my lawsuit against Magnus Carlsen and Chess.com has been resolved in a mutually acceptable manner, and that I am returning to Chess.com,” Niemann said in a statement. “I look forward to competing against Magnus in chess rather than in court.”

             

    Ethan Gach

    Source link

  • Chess Champ’s Mouse Slip Costs Him Final Match And $30K Top Prize

    Chess Champ’s Mouse Slip Costs Him Final Match And $30K Top Prize

    Photo: Dean Mouhtaropoulos (Getty Images)

    On April 6, 5-Time World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen lost in a dramatic and surprising way: His mouse slipped and he moved his queen to the wrong spot, instantly costing him the match. Not only did this knock him out of the tournament and cost him a chance at the sizable $30,000 top prize, but this was also the last event he’d participate in as the reigning World Champion.

    Last year, you might remember that one of the biggest stories in the world of professional chess was the surprising defeat of Carlsen at the hands of the young Grandmaster Hans Niemann. The stunning upset quickly sparked online accusations of cheating, with one particular Reddit (joke) theory about vibrating anal beads spreading like wildfire. Carlsen believes Niemann is a cheater and Chess.com accused him of cheating, too. Niemann denied the charges and in October 2022 sued Carlsen, his chess app Play Magnus, the website Chess.com, Chess.com’s Daniel Rensch, and streamer Hikaru Nakamura for $100 million.

    But before all of this, Carlsen had already announced his plans to vacate his Chess World Champion seat. And Thursday’s match against Hikaru Nakamura was part of his last event as champ. I doubt anyone expected it would all end with a simple error caused by a mouse slip.

    Carlsen’s misclick costs him the match

    As reported by Chess.com, Carlsen was competing against his old rival, Nakamura; the two are considered to be two of the best online chess players in the world. They were competing in an armageddon-rules play-off in the Losers Bracket. But in the final seconds of the tense match, Carlsen accidentally dropped his queen on the wrong spot. According to chess grandmaster David Howell it was “the worst possible mouse slip.” Right after the mistake, Nakamura took down Carlsen’s misplaced queen and the game ended instantly.

    The tournament is still ongoing, and Nakamura has advanced out of the Losers Bracket and toward the prize money.

    As for Carlsen, this likely won’t be the end of the world. While he will vacate his World Champion title soon, he won’t be retiring. In July 2022, he explained in a podcast that he will remain an active chess player and has events and matches to come in the future. He just no longer wanted to defend his title, as he found it was starting to be a more negative than positive experience, even when winning.

    Still, I bet he didn’t have “mouse slips and I lose my final match as World Champ in a million-dollar tournament” on the bingo card for how this chapter of his career would wrap up.

    Zack Zwiezen

    Source link

  • Magnus Carlsen beats Hikaru Nakamura in battle of chess’ big guns | CNN

    Magnus Carlsen beats Hikaru Nakamura in battle of chess’ big guns | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    The battle of chess’ behemoths ended in victory for five-time world champion Magnus Carlsen, with the Norwegian beating Hikaru Nakamura to be crowned Airthings Masters champion.

    In the grand final played on Chess.com, Carlsen defeated his great rival 2.5-1.5 to win the first Champions Chess Tour event of the season and net £30,000 ($36,192) in the process.

    The win also secures him a place in the end-of-season Tour Playoffs in December.

    It was the second time that Carlsen had beaten the American in the competition. He had earlier this week seen off the world number six in the winners final, with Nakamura going on to qualify for the grand final by beating Wesley So in the loser’s final.

    Carlsen had only lost one game all tournament, to Indian teenager Arjun Erigaisi, but did not feel he had played his best chess.

    “It feels a little bit weird,” said Carlsen, per Chess.com. “Overall, I am a little bit underwhelmed since I didn’t feel like the tournament ever got going. But there will be more excitement to come.”

    International Master Tania Sachdev said of Carlsen’s performance, per Chess.com: “He was flawless today, start to finish. He took his chances when Hikaru got too risky, he never gave him a chance to come back.

    “Even the game when he was on the defense, that big Game 3, that Hikaru opportunity, he really showed amazing resilience. He completely deserves this win. It was amazing play, and this is why he’s World Champion.”

    Source link

  • From classical to bullet, the different variants of chess explained | CNN

    From classical to bullet, the different variants of chess explained | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    From Netflix shows such as “The Queen’s Gambit” to its rock and roll superstar Magnus Carlsen, the popularity of chess has never been stronger.

    As the game embraces the digital world, chess has only continued to grow and is now eagerly consumed by all generations.

    Online platform Chess.com says it now has more than 102 million users signed up – a 238% increase from January 2020 – with 7.5 million active users every day.

    Meanwhile, some of the sport’s very best players have amassed huge social media followings by streaming games online. The game is so embedded in the public’s consciousness that there is now even such a thing as a chess influencer.

    With the game evolving year on year, and with Carlsen playing in a tournament dubbed “chess Wimbledon” on Saturday, CNN takes a look at some of the most popular chess variants with the help of Grandmaster and three-time British Champion David Howell.

    Most will be familiar with the rules of classical chess, a game that has been around in some form or other for over a thousand years.

    Players compete to checkmate their opponent and have a long time to do so.

    The clock, which tracks the time left for both players, usually starts at 90 minutes but games can go on for much longer.

    For the upcoming FIDE World Cup this year, for example, players will have 90 minutes for the first 40 moves, followed by 30 minutes for the rest of the game. Players also receive an extra 30 seconds for each move they make, meaning individual games can last for hours.

    In 2021, Carlsen beat Ian Nepomniachtchi after seven hours, 45 minutes and 136 moves, the longest single game in world championship history. That was the sixth match of the best-of-14-game series, though Carlsen only needed 11 games to win.

    “Classical is the most historic kind of time control. In the old days, they used to have hours or even days at a time for their game,” Howell told CNN.

    “So it’s a longer form. I think the average classical game takes about four hours and it’s all about endurance.

    “Objectively, the level is very high. There are very few blunders and often it’s about incremental gains. You have to add up all these small advantages to outlast your opponent.”

    Due to the time available to think about your next move, draws at the top level are very common and there is practically no margin for error.

    Howell says all players have databases available to them to study all of their opponent’s previous games, meaning they can plan ahead for matches.

    Some players, including Howell himself, can very occasionally predict the next 20 moves of a game because of the time given to analyze the board.

    Carlsen is the current world classical champion and has been since 2013.

    For those who struggle to stay engaged with the classical version of chess, there is a faster option available.

    Rapid has the same rules as classical but players have between 10 and 60 minutes to make their moves.

    With the clock ticking, players tend to make more mistakes with draws less likely.

    “Here there is a heavy emphasis on the opening because you’ve got such a short amount of time,” Howell said.

    “You don’t want to get into trouble early in the game because you don’t really have time to think and to fight back.”

    Howell says these games tend to become a scramble for time by the end, with players taking more risks.

    In the past, some of the biggest names in chess wouldn’t have touched these faster versions but nowadays, the sport’s biggest stars take it seriously.

    As a result, the standard is still very high with perhaps only one mistake a game due to the time pressure.

    In addition to checkmate, players can also lose if they run out of time.

    Carlsen, yet again, is the world rapid champion after winning the title in December 2022.

    Carlsen is world champion in classical, rapid and blitz chess.

    If you need a quicker dopamine hit, blitz chess is an even faster version of the sport and players are permitted no more than 10 minutes, according to the game’s governing body FIDE.

    Howell, though, says most blitz games are between three to five minutes long.

    The time allocated can also include incremental additions. For example, 5/1 blitz would refer to the number of minutes players start with (five) and the number of additional seconds (one) players receive after making their move.

    These games require players to think fast and move at lightning speed.

    “Blitz is fast and furious. It’s a lot about instincts, it’s all about speed,” Howell said.

    “Often the maximum you have on the clock is five minutes each for the whole game. But nowadays, three minutes is kind of the standard but you do get, for example, two seconds every move, like a small buffer, an increment,” added Howell, referring to other blitz variants.

    “It does pay off to be very aggressive quite often, because attacking is easier than defending.”

    Carlsen is again the world champion has a worthy rival in US player Hikaru Nakamura.

    The 35-year-old Nakamura represents a new era of chess and has amassed 1.6 million followers on streaming platform Twitch by broadcasting his online games.

    Howell says both Carlsen and Nakamura have an incredible ability to make snap decisions and are able to solve situations within a split second.

    Despite the years of practice, even the biggest stars make glaring errors. But according to Howell, that’s all part of the fun.

    “It’s like going from a five setter in tennis down to just the final tiebreak,” Howell said, speaking to the difference between blitz and classical.

    “Sometimes you just get unlucky. There’s far less control over your own fate.”

    If you have an even greater need for speed there is bullet chess which, as its name suggests, is the fastest of all variants and an offshoot of blitz.

    It’s almost always played online with players usually having just one minute to make all their moves.

    Although chess purists have widely adopted the other time constraints, bullet chess is often looked at as a bit of a lottery.

    “It’s more about just surprising the opponent at any cost,” Howell said.

    “Your moves don’t need to be the best ones but surprise value is the key because if your opponent burns 10 or 20 seconds on one move, they’ve basically lost all the time and lost the game.”

    With bullet chess almost exclusively played digitally, Howell says the variant has become something of an esport, with players needing to rely on their mouse dexterity as much as their understanding of the game.

    Online chess, including platform Chess.com, has grown year on year.

    The shift to a digital landscape has also seen a change in the psychology involved in playing the game.

    “A lot of players perform better if they don’t see their opponent because they don’t get involved with the mind games,” added Howell.

    “For example, if I were to play Magnus Carlsen and I didn’t know it was Magnus, I think I would score far better than if I were sitting across the board from him because there’s that kind aura around him, that air of dominance.

    “If he makes a gesture or frowns, suddenly you panic and you make a terrible decision. You can automatically play this submissive role and the top players often overwhelm their opponents psychologically.

    “Online, it’s easier to stay calm. You don’t feel your opponent’s breath on your face.”

    Finally, there is the wildcard variant called Chess 960, or Fischer random chess.

    Created by former world chess champion Bobby Fischer, the game is different not just for its time constraints but for the positioning of its pieces.

    While the pawns are still lined up on the second row, the pieces behind are placed randomly.

    It prevents players from planning their moves ahead of time and Howell believes this is a variant that will continue to grow.

    “There’s 960 different starting positions and therefore you can’t really memorize the opening stage,” he said.

    “Basically, each player comes fresh to the game and it’s all about understanding rather than who’s got a better memory.”

    Source link

  • Magnus Carlsen becomes triple world champion for the third time in his career | CNN

    Magnus Carlsen becomes triple world champion for the third time in his career | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    Magnus Carlsen won both the World Rapid and World Blitz chess titles in Almaty, Kazakhstan, in the latest landmark of his glittering career.

    The 32-year-old Norwegian is now the holder of all three world chess championship titles – in Classical, Rapid and Blitz – for the third time in his career, while no other player has ever won both the Rapid and Blitz titles in the same year.

    “Gonna need more hands soon,” Carlsen joked on Twitter, posting a video of himself counting his now 15 world titles on his fingers.

    It caps a triumphant end to Carlsen’s remarkable decade-long reign as the classical world champion, as he has already announced that he will not defend his title next year.

    “It feels great,” he said in a press release after winning two world championship titles in three days.

    “This is a really tough event. It started great yesterday but I wasn’t feeling I had a lot of energy… Yesterday I was trying to survive until day two and see if I had some chance… Today I felt a little bit better than yesterday and I tried to win as many games as I could.”

    The Rapid and Blitz championships are more time pressured than classical chess. Rapid allows each player 15 minutes + 10 seconds additional time per move, starting from move 1 while Blitz is three minutes per player per game, with two seconds additional time per move.

    Carlsen secured his fourth Rapid title on Wednesday, half a point ahead of Germany’s Vincent Keymer.

    He then made a dramatic entrance to Round 1 of the World Blitz Championship, running through the playing hall and arriving at his board two minutes and 30 seconds late, still dressed in a tracksuit.

    He still went on to win the match, with just 30 seconds on the clock.

    “To some extent, the Blitz title is very important because it’s [won in a tournament with] more rounds… As far as the classical championship [goes] I won it but it wasn’t dear enough to hold on to.”

    The USA’s Hikaru Nakamura had led the tournament after Day 1 but he eventually finished second overall, under pressure from Carlsen.

    “While he is used to winning tournaments he’s never won this one,” Carlsen said afterwards in a press release. “When he started a bit shakey, then I knew I had a chance.”

    However, Carlsen too faced pressure as he suffered two defeats at important moments – to Russia’s Ian Nepomniachtchi and Alexey Sarana.

    But he held on to eventually seal victory by a point ahead of Nakamura and Armenia’s Haik M. Martirosyan in third place.

    Source link

  • 74 Things That Blew Our Minds in 2022

    74 Things That Blew Our Minds in 2022

    The writers on The Atlantic’s Science, Technology, and Health desks have learned a lot this year. Our coverage of the ongoing coronavirus pandemic has continued, but this year, more so than in 2020 and 2021, we’ve also had the chance to report on topics that have filled us with awe and delight. Though the past 12 months have not been free of concerns about infectious disease, climate change, and even nuclear war, we’ve embraced more fascination and curiosity in our coverage this year, and we wanted to share and reflect on some of the most compelling tidbits we’ve stumbled across. We hope you find these facts as mind-blowing as we did.

    1. Days on the moon are hot enough to boil water, and nights are unfathomably cold, but at least one spot on the lunar surface stays a pleasant 63 degrees Fahrenheit.
    2. Actually, snakes do have clitorises.
    3. Scientists don’t know where the virus in the smallpox vaccine came from.
    4. Sour or curdled milk is often perfectly safe to consume.
    5. The bone of a mastodon named Fred preserved memories from its life 13,200 years ago.
    6. The most common phrase on Facebook in several French-speaking countries is “Have a nice day!”
    7. Most people with diabetes should not receive insulin as a first-, second-, or even third-line treatment.
    8. There might not be a theoretical limit to the height from which a cat can fall and survive.
    9. Beyond a certain temperature—as low as 95 degrees, by some estimates—fans do more harm than good.
    10. About 10 percent of the bills introduced in Congress in the past two years have been titled with reverse-engineered acronyms, including the ZOMBIE Act.
    11. The notes your doctor writes about you probably don’t look the same now as they did a year and a half ago.
    12. It takes at least seven years to train the muscles and tendons in your elbow that will make you a great arm wrestler, according to the arm wrestler Jack Arias, who was in the 1987 arm-wrestling movie Over the Top with Sylvester Stallone.
    13. American Express started making metal cards in 2004 because of an urban legend about its most exclusive card being titanium.
    14. The first-of-its-kind electric Hummer weighs as much as an ambulance and accelerates like a Formula 1 race car.
    15. Woodpeckers have small brains, which is why they can smash their heads against trees unharmed.
    16. A toaster-size device inside a rover on Mars can convert Martian air, made almost entirely of carbon dioxide, into breathable oxygen.
    17. Parrot theft is weirdly common.
    18. Lactose-intolerant people have been throwing back dairy for thousands and thousands of years.
    19. The provision in the Affordable Care Act that requires health insurance to cover contraception does not require coverage for vasectomies.
    20. Pawpaws tend to stay green throughout their life cycle, so in order to tell if they’re ripe, you have to individually caress every fruit on a tree.
    21. The metal that makes up a nickel has long been worth more than the coin itself.
    22. The Presidential Fitness Test was developed because the federal government worried that postwar children were too soft to defeat communism when they grew up.
    23. The iPhone is the only major Apple product that doesn’t support charging with the now-ubiquitous USB-C cable.
    24. The oldest clam ever lived to 507.
    25. The word sure was once pronounced more like syoor.
    26. Some of YouTube’s earliest hits got popular thanks to “coolhunters,” a group of editors who individually picked videos for the site’s homepage.
    27. In 1918, California conscripted children into a week-long war on squirrels.
    28. Some baby cameras feature artificial intelligence that will recognize when your baby’s face is covered or when the baby has coughed.
    29. Extreme heat and specific pressure conditions on WASP-96b, an exoplanet about 1,150 light-years from Earth, mean that rock can condense in the air like water does on Earth, producing clouds made of sand.
    30. In 2021, a full quarter of single-family homes sold in America went to buyers with no intention of living in them, such as house flippers, landlords, Airbnb hosts, and other investors.
    31. Apple has released 38 distinct models of the iPhone since 2007.
    32. Slurpees and Icees are the exact same “frozen carbonated beverage,” sold under different trademarks.
    33. The agricultural revolution is a myth.
    34. Hypoallergenic dogs are also a myth.
    35. Reindeers’ eyes change color—from blue to gold, and then back to blue again—twice a year to cope with the Arctic’s strange light schedule.
    36. If current trends hold, half of the world’s population could be nearsighted by 2050.
    37. A 2006 effort to automatically take down internet pornography by detecting repetitive noises ended up catching a lot of tennis videos.
    38. Some minerals in rechargeable batteries can be recycled indefinitely.
    39. Julius Caesar reportedly announced his conquest of Gaul via pigeon.
    40. The Japanese makers of Hi-Chew candy were persuaded to push into the mainstream American market because of the candy’s enduring popularity among missionaries from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints who had returned home after time in East Asia.
    41. Secondhand-smoke inhalation causes more than 41,000 deaths annually in the U.S., more than some flu seasons.
    42. The Microsoft Excel World Championship: (1) exists, (2) streams on ESPN3, and (3) is legitimately exciting.
    43. Saturn’s trademark rings will disappear in about 300 million years.
    44. But, on the bright side, Neptune has rings too.
    45. China’s zero-COVID policy may be largely responsible for gas prices falling from a March peak to below $4 a gallon in August.
    46. Polar bears in Southeast Greenland are homebodies.
    47. The world’s best chess player, Magnus Carlsen, has, by one calculation, a 98 percent chance of losing and a 2 percent chance of drawing against the world’s best chess-playing computer program; victory is basically impossible.
    48. Earlier this year, Moonbirds NFTs—basically colorful little pixelated owls—generated $489 million in trading volume in their first two weeks of existence.
    49. In 1975, the average grocery store stocked 65 kinds of fruits and veggies. By 1998, that number had reached 345.
    50. Octopuses all over the sea starve for years on end while brooding.
    51. Government spending on climate change over the next decade could end up more than double what Democratic senators predicted for the Inflation Reduction Act.
    52. Robusta coffee—whose taste has been likened to “rotten compost … with a hint of sulfur”—can actually be delicious.
    53. Journals can be big business: One collector sold a diary from a 1912 Machu Picchu visitor and another by an 1868 Missouri River traveler for about $9,000 each.
    54. There is such a thing as a reformed parasite.
    55. In Wordle, just one correct letter in the right spot and one in the wrong spot can eliminate 96 percent of possible solutions.
    56. A major obstacle to meeting the United States’ clean-energy goals is that we have to double the rate at which we build the giant cables that transmit power between regions.
    57. Little kids who grew up amid intense COVID restrictions might have different microbiomes than those born several years earlier—and whether that’s good or bad is unclear.
    58. Militaries are developing swarms of starling-size drones that will be able to fly and attack together with the use of artificial intelligence.
    59. Psychedelics seem to quiet a network in our brain that is most active when we focus on ourselves.
    60. The cryptocurrency exchange FTX, once valued at $32 billion before a spectacular collapse, used QuickBooks for accounting.
    61. A product needs to be just 10 percent cocoa to be called “chocolate” by the FDA.
    62. Gophers … might … farm?
    63. While asleep, teeth-grinders can clench down with up to 250 pounds of force.
    64. In 2021, 95 of the United States’ 100 most-watched telecasts were sporting events.
    65. You can pay hundreds of dollars an hour for cow-hug therapy.
    66. Male widow spiders will somersault into a female’s mouth to be cannibalized while they’re mating.
    67. Ninety percent of people report having at least one memory in which they can see themselves as if watching a character in a movie.
    68. Offices are designed to be inefficient.
    69. Climate-minded architectural firms in Senegal are pushing the country to reclaim mud construction.
    70. Rats can learn to play hide-and-seek, and they have fun doing it.
    71. A cat kidney transplant costs $15,000.
    72. The Apollo 11 moon lander will sit on the moon for millions of years because there’s no wind or water to erode it away.
    73. Your smart thermostat mostly exists to help the utility company, not your wallet.
    74. The cocaine-eating bear that died in 1985 and inspired the upcoming film Cocaine Bear is stuffed, mounted, and on display at a mall in Lexington, Kentucky.

    The Atlantic Science Desk

    Source link

  • Teenage grandmaster ‘likely cheated’ in dozens of matches, top chess website claims | CNN

    Teenage grandmaster ‘likely cheated’ in dozens of matches, top chess website claims | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    Teenage chess grandmaster Hans Niemann “likely cheated” in more than 100 online matches, including ones with prize money involved, according to an investigation by one of the sport’s most popular websites.

    The 72-page report by Chess.com was released on Tuesday, a month after controversy erupted at a top tournament when the world chess champion accused the 19-year-old American of cheating.

    According to the report, first referenced by the Wall Street Journal, Niemann privately confessed to cheating to the website’s chief chess officer in 2020, which led to him being temporarily banned from the platform.

    The report said Chess.com closed Niemann’s account in September given his previous acknowledgments of cheating, suspicions about his recent play and concerns about the steep, inconsistent rise in his rank.

    “While we don’t doubt that Hans is a talented player, we note that his results are statistically extraordinary,” the report said.

    Niemann has previously admitted publicly to cheating in online matches at the ages of 12 and 16 but the investigation alleged he had cheated more recently.

    Niemann has not responded to CNN’s request for comment.

    Chess.com has millions of users and hosts more than 10 million chess games a day, according to its owners. To detect suspected cheating, the website uses software that flags suspicious moves by comparing a player’s moves to those suggested by a chess engine. Fewer than 0.14% of players ever cheat on the site, according to the report.

    The controversy began last month, when world chess champion Magnus Carlsen accused Niemann of cheating at the $350,000 Sinquefield Cup in St. Louis, Missouri.

    “I believe that Niemann has cheated more – and more recently – than he has publicly admitted,” the 31-year-old Norwegian said in a statement posted to Twitter.

    “His over the board progress has been unusual, and throughout our game in the Sinquefield Cup I had the impression that he wasn’t tense or even fully concentrating on the game in critical positions, while outplaying me as black in a way I think only a handful of players can do. This game contributed to changing my perspective.”

    Carlsen pulled out of the tournament after losing to Niemann. Chess’ global governing body, FIDE, announced last week that it is investigating Carlsen’s allegations.

    Over the board chess is played face to face, rather than online. Carlsen did not provide details about how Niemann may have cheated.

    In an interview with the St. Louis Chess Club last month, Niemann said he had never cheated in over the board games.

    “I cheated on random games on Chess.com. I was confronted. I confessed. And this is the single biggest mistake of my life,” he said. ” And I am completely ashamed. I am telling the world because I don’t want misrepresentations and I don’t want rumours. I have never cheated in an over the board game. And other than when I was 12 years old I have never cheated in a tournament with prize money.”

    According to the Chess.com report, cheating in an over the board setting could involve “various methods such as: hand signals from a nearby coach or accessing a phone in the bathroom, a hidden device in a shoe, or a wire or buzzer taped to the body.”

    The report said Chess.com had not typically investigated cheating in over the board games, but it believed Niemann’s performances in some live games “merit further investigation based on the data.”

    “In our view, there is no direct evidence that proves Hans cheated at the September 4, 2022 game with Magnus, or proves that he has cheated in other OTB games in the past,” the report said.

    Source link

  • Chess Grandmaster Probably Cheated In More Than 100 Online Games, Investigation Finds

    Chess Grandmaster Probably Cheated In More Than 100 Online Games, Investigation Finds

    U.S. chess grandmaster Hans Niemann cheated more than 100 times in his online professional career, a new report claims.

    A 72-page report from Chess.com alleges that he broke the rules and “likely cheated in more than 100 online chess games, including several prize money events.”

    The report also noted that Niemann confessed to cheating on numerous occasions in a private phone call with the platform’s chief chess officer, Danny Rensch.

    The document comes just a month after world chess champion Magnus Carlsen suggested Niemann, 19, was a cheater, which fueled rumors of Niemann using vibrating anal beads to communicate with his coach.

    During a match against Niemann on Sept. 19, Carlsen, the world’s No. 1 champion, made a single move and then quit the game, according to The Guardian. He then posted a cryptic tweet announcing that he refused to play against Niemann in order to “preserve the game of chess.”

    World chess champion Magnus Carlsen accused Hans Niemann, 19, of cheating.

    ARUN SANKAR/AFP via Getty Images

    “I believe that Niemann has cheated more — and more recently — than he has publicly admitted,” Carlsen wrote on Twitter a week after the match, addressing the matter.

    “His over-the-board progress has been unusual, and throughout our game in the Sinquefield Cup, I had the impression that he wasn’t tense or even fully concentrating on the game in critical positions while outplaying me as black in a way I think only a handful of players can do,” he added.

    Amid the buzzing rumors about the wirelessly controlled beads, Niemann offered to play in the nude to prove he wasn’t cheating.

    “If they want me to strip fully naked, I will do it. I don’t care because I know I am clean,” Niemann said at the time.

    Niemann initially denied the cheating accusations but allegedly told Chess.com he had cheated only two times — once when he was 12 and once at 16 — calling the decision the “single biggest mistake of my life,” according to The Guardian.

    The report also said that many of the tournaments he cheated in included cash prizes.

    After Niemann questioned last month why he was banned from the Global Championship, a million-dollar prize event, the Chess.com chief chess officer, Danny Rensch, responded with a written explanation.

    Suggesting that Niemann showcased suspicious moves, Rensch wrote, “There always remained serious concerns about how rampant your cheating was in prize events.”

    He went on to imply that Niemann used a chess engine to identify the best moves.

    “We are prepared to present strong statistical evidence that confirm each of those cases above, as well as clear ‘toggling’ vs. ‘non-toggling’ evidence, where you perform much better while toggling to a different screen during your moves,” Rensch added.

    According to the report, Chess.com has anti-cheating measures in place, including various cheat-detection tools, that have caught many of the game’s players cheating.

    Niemann has not yet issued a statement on the report’s findings.

    Source link