Hi Gary,
Perhaps you have heard of the great resignation?
https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2022/03/09/majority-of-workers-who-…
Perhaps try GNU chess? I recall my professor at Sac State saying it was
pretty good.
Brian
On Thu, Oct 26, 2023 at 03:55:58PM -0700, Gary wrote:
IMHO for a variety of reasons, a lot of people left
the work force. This caused the labor pool to reach further down the bell shaped curve to
find willing participants.
Unfortunately, the complexity of the world, which in my opinion is too complex or perhaps
overly complex or perhaps more complex than it needs to be, remained the same.
As a result, many even moderately complex things are breaking. Like for example chess on
Linux. I just spent most of my afternoon installing various chess programs, they
don't really work. Some don't work at all. Some sort of work, but have various
sort of major features that don't work. Gnome-chess works. But I can beat it easily.
I haven't played for a while, and I'm not that good. It says I can install
another engine. But it fails to tell me how and if I go out to Google, the features that
it documents don't actually exit on the actual app.
Actually brutalchess might work too. It has no man page and no menu of any kind. There
is no documentation of any kind on the web page, but there is a forum and a mailing lists.
You just move and it starts playing. It seems like it makes pretty good moves, but the
display is hard for me to see and I can't change it.
10 years ago, this was easy and worked just fine.
Granted, enthusiasm for chess has wained somewhat. Sigh.
I'm just glad I don't have any brain surgery scheduled in the near future.
I doubt if people are going to get smarter or perhaps less careless, overnight. But
perhaps the world will simplify a bid. Eventually. That would be a good thing IMHO.
-Gary
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--
Brian Lavender
http://www.brie.com/brian/
"There are two ways of constructing a software design. One way is to
make it so simple that there are obviously no deficiencies. And the other
way is to make it so complicated that there are no obvious deficiencies."
Professor C. A. R. Hoare
The 1980 Turing award lecture