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Annie K.
Member since Apr-02-04
Annie Kappel

This profile needs an update badly, but I don't have the time... :)

My YouTube channel, featuring pronunciations of non-English chess player names: http://www.youtube.com/user/AnnieK1...

I'm 45 y/o, of Transylvanian origin, living in Israel since childhood. I speak English (no, really), Hungarian (great language!), and Hebrew (if I must, which is often, for some reason).

Afflicted with an uncontrollable sense of humor and other highly controversial characteristics.

I learned chess as a child, but had no further opportunities to practice the game. Returned to it seriously around 2004, and have been hanging out here since.

Note: if I am not home (i.e., here), you can probably find me at the Domdaniel chessforum, the SwitchingQuylthulg chessforum, the visayanbraindoctor chessforum, or the chessgames.com chessforum! :)

---

<My City of Moscow skits:>

<<<<<<>>>>> Kramnik's Party -> City of Moscow (kibitz #752)

<<<<<<>>>>> Sochi 2008: An F-Files Production -> City of Moscow (kibitz #774)

---

<Game Collection: My GotD Puns>

<My favorites:>

All Your Baze Are Belong To Us - L Baze vs T Palmer, 2004 - GotD Mar-21-10

Y Yu No Claim Repetition? - Yu Yangyi vs M R Venkatesh, 2012 - GotD Jun-30-12

He Who Has E Tate is Lost - E Tate vs Y Shulman, 2001 - GotD Sep-22-16

How Many Roads Must Aman Walk Down? - S Shankland vs A Hambleton, 2014 - GotD Dec-23-16 (besides the obvious reason for the pun - a long King walk - note also the terms 'shank' and 'amble' embedded in the player names)

So me the Wei - W So vs Wei Yi, 2013 - GotD Jan-29-17

This Won't Borya Ider - B Ider vs Wei Yi, 2014 - GotD Apr-01-17 (follow-up to previous day's GotD, 'This Won't Borya')

Injun vs Engin' - Anand vs REBEL, 1997 - GotD Jan-06-2018

---

<My other (linkable) site contributions:>

* The Player Names Pronunciation Project: http://www.chessgames.com/audio (or look for names with a loudspeaker icon in the Player Directory)

* Created on my suggestion: Biographer Bistro

* The first (now retired) Carlsen Dancing Rook: https://web.archive.org/web/2013040...

* The Caruana Dancing Rook:
http://www.chessgames.com/chessimag...

* The Hou Dancing Rook:
http://www.chessgames.com/chessimag...

---

<<<<<<< MAJOR CHESS SITES <<>>>>>>>>>

<< Correspondence chess <<<<<<>>>>>>>>

< ChessWorld -> http://www.chessworld.net

ChessWorld is my new main chess playing base. It's a rather restrictive site for non-paying members, but one of the best sites for paying members. The full features include excellent interface options and first class study and analysis resources. Nice community, likeable admin. Paid membership recommended.

< Update: while I will leave the original entry for ChessWorld as-is, I have by now been a member of the site for 2 years, and am now an admin there. I still think the site is one of the best, and the <other> admins are nice. :p >

My ChessWorld profile: http://www.letsplaychess.com/chessc...

< Queen Alice -> http://www.queenalice.com

Queen Alice is a charming site - well behaved players, decent admin, site design visually very pleasant. It is also completely free. Unfortunately, it lacks team play, the interface and resources are relatively simple, and it can be frustratingly slow (loading times). Nevertheless warmly recommended.

My QueenAlice profile: http://www.queenalice.com/player.ph...

< GameKnot -> http://gameknot.com

GameKnot is technically an excellent site, however I would not recommend it to the serious player who is looking for a site to settle in, due to an anti$ocial admin with ju$t one $ingle intere$t in hi$ $ite... oop$, $orry about the typo$.

My GameKnot profile: http://gameknot.com/stats.pl?annie-....

<< Other chess sites <<<<<<>>>>>>>>

< FICS - the Free Internet Chess Server -> http://www.freechess.org

FICS is a great site to play chess at various faster time controls. There are a few difficulties getting started with it - first, it can be hard to find an email they will accept for registration; and second, there's a lot of site code to learn. But it's worth the hassle. :)

< ChessCube -> http://www.chesscube.com

ChessCube is quite good for fast time control games - provided you have a strong computer with broadband, as the site is entirely Flash based, which means it takes considerable computer resources to load. The site is nominally free, but heavily commercialized with all sorts of frills that can be purchased on it.

< Emrald Chess Tactics Server -> http://chess.emrald.net

Emrald is not a playing site - it is an invaluable tactical training asset. The only problem with it is also the difficulty of finding an "acceptable" email address to register with; but once past that hurdle, the site deserves nothing but praise.

It's a completely free site. You can play (practice) there as a guest, but they recommend registering, so that their program can keep track of your progress, in order to assign you puzzles best suited to your current level. I strongly second that recommendation. Register and always play logged in! It will make a huge difference in the site's ability to help you improve. An issue that scares some people off Emrald is that your progress is tracked via a "rating system", and because of the high importance they assign to speed, if you are not used to finding tactics fast, your rating will be very low at first - and many people are simply embarrassed to play logged in for that reason. Don't let it bother you! If you let embarrassment hold you back from letting the site help you improve to the best of its ability, you are only shooting yourself in the foot, and nobody else really cares that much anyway. ;p

A few of the people I've recommended Emrald to, had dropped it after a brief trial with remarks along the lines of "Oh, it's a blitz training site. I don't play blitz, so I don't like their obsession with speed." That reaction is absolutely wrong - and it's also one that many people who try the site out for only a short time are likely to have, if only because players who are used to being rated, say, 2000 and above, at corr. chess sites, are going to be annoyed and put on the defensive about finding themselves rated as low as 1200-1300 at Emrald, and will wish to dismiss the "insulting" site.

Yes, the Emrald rating system is heavily influenced by speed. But thinking that the site's purpose is blitz training is a complete misunderstanding of the lesson taught. The real purpose of Emrald practice is not to improve your blitz skills, but to train you to recognize dozens of tactical themes and opportunities AT A GLANCE - which will not only save you time in games of any time control, but is often the only way you will catch them AT ALL. Those brilliant tactical shots that can be seen in anyone's collection of "most memorable games", are often moves that will either occur to you as soon as you glance at the position, or you will miss them altogether. That's what Emrald really teaches - tactical chess intuition.

<Intuition in chess can be defined as the first move that comes to mind when you see a position. --- <Viswanathan Anand>>

<Personally, I am of the view that if a strong master does not see such a threat at once he will not notice it, even if he analyses the position for twenty or thirty minutes. --- <Tigran Petrosian >>

<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>

^ TL;DR.

Any other questions, feel free to ask. I might even answer. ;p

>> Click here to see Annie K.'s game collections.

Chessgames.com Full Member
   Current net-worth: 990 chessbucks
[what is this?]

   Annie K. has kibitzed 8212 times to chessgames   [more...]
   Sep-15-20 S Mariotti vs A Geller, 1990
 
Annie K.: The Black player in this game has been corrected from Efim to Alexander Geller. Thanks. :)
 
   Sep-14-20 chessgames.com chessforum (replies)
 
Annie K.: <MissS> ah, yes, the key term "I challenged her" - that pretty much describes the previous post too, which was a blown out of all proportion tirade about the severity of the Player of the Day (not the entire homepage as claimed, which I check on almost every midnight, ...
 
   Sep-12-20 Champions Showdown Chess 9LX (2020) (replies)
 
Annie K.: Note: if you can't see the games, please set your game viewer to pgn4web (in the box under the game score) - but remember to set it back to our default viewer Olga in the end, as it is about to be upgraded soon, and will be the best of our viewers. :)
 
   Sep-04-20 Chessgames Bookie chessforum (replies)
 
Annie K.: The logs have been checked, and the top places are cleared. Congratulations to winner <moronovich>, the other 5 qualifiers, and the rest of the top 10! :) We have opened the Fall Leg, so if anything turns up, betting can start immediately, but we have no official schedule for
 
   Aug-01-20 Biographer Bistro (replies)
 
Annie K.: <Tab> The WCC pages are tied in with some special functions, and changing them can cause far-ranging problems at this time (remember when merely changing the WCC page titles caused stats to disappear from the pages of participating players?), so let's take this up again after
 
   Jul-29-20 Ding Liren vs Leko, 2020
 
Annie K.: Identical to K Stupak vs E Shtembuliak, 2020 .
 
   Jul-24-20 Annie K. chessforum (replies)
 
Annie K.: A fun conversation from 2016... :) <Daniel:> I’ve come to learn a lot about what sports broadcasting must be like. Actually I learned about it long before CG when I worked at a newspaper. If there is a sporting event you MUST be excited about it, from a business ...
 
   Jul-22-20 Biel (2020) (replies)
 
Annie K.: It gets worse - the chess24 intro says "In case of a tie for first place chess960 rapid games will be played", but in fact the official site specifies that the chess960 tiebreaks in question are the ACCENTUS 960 games - which have already been played on the 18th, the event's first ...
 
   Jul-21-20 Csom vs A Yusupov, 1982
 
Annie K.: The only requirement for this excellent pun is to pronounce Csom correctly. Which means, as "Chom". :)
 
   Jul-17-20 K Pedersen vs G F Kane, 1972 (replies)
 
Annie K.: <jith> thank you for the always helpful directions. :) So all 12 Pedersen games we have in Chess Olympiad Final-A (1972) games are about to be reassigned from Eigil to Karl.
 
(replies) indicates a reply to the comment.

Procrastinators' Club (planned)

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 195 OF 274 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Dec-28-13  Thanh Phan: <Shams> I do work at improving my English, yes it takes both effort and time in an environment of English speakers,

There are several resources to aid in learning other languages,

Ruth Elizabeth–or Thảo, as she is known in Vietnam is a guest-poster for the http://www.lingholic.com/ site and has her own webpage, http://morevietnamese.com/ with many valuable tips, tricks and information for language learning

Dec-29-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  OhioChessFan: http://www.blogcdn.com/www.mandator...
Dec-29-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  Domdaniel: I agree with Thanh Phan ("more of a journey or a tour of a new world"). I agree with Shams ("I'm impressed"). And I agree with Annie (most of the time, to be honest, but "a great way to gain both vocabulary and a 'feel' for the correct usage" will do nicely.)

Hey, I'm very agreeable all of a sudden!

Heh.

Dec-29-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  Annie K.: <Dom> it's progress... ;)

<Ohio> wow, I hope the kitty is all right. As for the kid, if he doesn't know how to swim, he had better be a fast learner. :p

Dec-29-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  OhioChessFan: Kitty Karma bit him.
Dec-29-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  Annie K.: <Ohio> btw, there's Doggy Karma too!

http://cheezburger.com/3824240896

Dec-30-13  dakgootje: <As for the kid, if he doesn't know how to swim, he had better be a fast learner. :p>

Did you know that (because the Low Countries are so very low in many respects) Dutch children are taught to swim very early on? As a matter of fact, many births take place in a bath - so babies are highly motivated to learn quickly.

True story that.

Dec-30-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  Annie K.: <dakkie> I like that. A little challenge never hurt... um, anyone worthy of survival? :)

PS - yes, I actually do know that's a true story, and why. ;)

Dec-31-13  dakgootje: Exactly!

This way only the athletic (who can make it out swimming), the tall (who can readily stand in the bath) and the smart (who build a makeshift raft) survive.

Which is why the Dutch are widely known for being tall, great swimmers and innate raftbuilders.

As a side-effect, there is a rare bunch who survive by floating - because their head is filled with helium. These tend to become our politicians.

Dec-31-13  Shams: Boldog uj evet! (Counting on google not to lead me astray there.)
Dec-31-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  chancho: A very Happy New Year's to you as well, <Annie>!

http://i.123g.us/c/ejan_ny_happy/ca...

Dec-31-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  WannaBe: Hoppppppppy New Year, Annie K. chessforum
Dec-31-13  Benzol: <Annie> Thankyou for the New Year wishes. All the best for your New Year celebrations too.

:)

Dec-31-13  hms123: <Annie> All the best for the coming calendar year of 2014. I think I am getting my groove back. Now if I just knew why...

hms

Dec-31-13  visayanbraindoctor: <dakgootje: < I did not realize that it's more difficult to comprehend for Europeans until you just said so.>

It's not really difficult as such - however such grammatical rules are simply ingrained in the idea how languages works.

For instance compare these sentences:

Qwerty likes blue cars.
John qwerties blue cars.
John likes qwerty cars.
John likes blue qwerties.

Clearly Qwerty/qwerties means respectively the sentences' subject, verb, adjective, and noun. Even though we don't know the word as such, we have a broad idea of its function.>

Enlightening explanation.

Dec-31-13  visayanbraindoctor: <<Sri VBD> Happy New Year!> Thank you.

Most Philippine languages use the term <salamat> for thank you. The root word is obviously <salam>, a semitic language family word, meaning peace. It's recognizable in the arabic salaam and hebrew shalom. Peculiarly if I were to say <salamat> to you. It would mean thank you in our languages but in a sense also peace be with you in hebrew.

Dec-31-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  WannaBe: Since this is the Procrastinator's Club, you should be wishing people Happy New Year on Jan. 3, or maybe 4th, possibly 5th...

But definitely before Feb. 30th for leap year.

Dec-31-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  Annie K.: <Shams> pretty good. ;)

<Sri Doc> not in Hebrew, that syntax is a bit different, but yes, that's exactly what it means in Arabic, and thanks either way. :)

Speaking of Arabic, I wanted to greet <Abdel Irada>, and he didn't have a forum... well, we just can't have that. So until he reopens his forum, I'll wish him a Happy New Year from here!

Also a Happy New Year to everybody else, and thanks to those who dropped by. :)

Dec-31-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  kingscrusher: Happy new year Annie :)
Dec-31-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  Domdaniel: Happy 2014, Annie... xG/D.
Dec-31-13  TheFocus: Happy New Year <Annie>! May 2014 be good for the site and its members!
Dec-31-13  twinlark: Hi Annie

Happy New Year.

Google has bollixed up my gmail, and I haven't been able to get it back since November when I accidentally activated Google+. Try twinlark@yahoo.com

Dec-31-13  MostlyAverageJoe: Happy 2014! Or was it supposed to be almost 4 months ago, and Happy 5774?
Jan-01-14
Premium Chessgames Member
  tpstar: <Annie> Happy New Year!

Stay kewl. :P

Jan-01-14  Thanh Phan: Happy New Year!
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