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Jan. 6, 13, and 27 Berkley Chess Club Oakland County – Oakland County 115 News

Jan. 6, 13, and 27 Berkley Chess Club

Jan. 6, 13, and 27 Berkley Chess Club

Berkley, MI The Berkley Chess Club meets on Mondays at the Berkley Public Library. Players of all ages and ability levels are welcome. If you have a board, go ahead and bring it, but if you are a new player there will be spares. If you have any questions you can email the organizer at Christopher_m_payne@yahoo.com.

The Berkley Public Library is located at 3155 Coolidge Highway in Berkley. For additional information, call 248-658-3440 or visit http://www.berkley.lib.mi.us. You can find us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/BerkleyPublicLibrary.

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Jan. 6, 13, and 27 Berkley Chess Club Oakland County - Oakland County 115 News

Chess: CM Kabera, Munyurangabo in tight title race ahead of final round – The New Times

Candidate Master (CM) Godfrey Kabera maintained his lead after trouncing reigning national champion, Joseph Nzabanita, on Sunday morning in the open section's round 7, at the ongoing 2019 National Chess Championship at Onomo Hotel, in Kigali.

But, 19-year-old Rongin Munyurangabo, second onthe table because of Kabera's tiebreak advantage, was also not giving up as he tamed Eugene Mugema Kagabo to keep his title hopes up.

CM Maxence Muraras title hopes took a hammer blow, earlier during round 5 when Munyurangabo refused to be intimidated by his senior and more experienced opponent. Murara won his round 7 encounter with another teen Ben Patrick Cyubahiro but much remains to be decided in the final round.

However, if Kabera and Munyurangabo lose their respective final games and Murara wins, the latter would win the championship.

In round 6, Munyurangabo faced Kabera while Murara (playing black) played Ben Tom Zimurinda, and the unbelievable happened. Murara lost, for the second time. But Kabera was also unable to squeeze out a win in what appeared to be a winnable Rook and pawn endgame duel and he shared the spoils with Munyurangabo.

Nzabanita, the 2018 national male champion, had a rough start on Thursday and Friday and his chances to retain the title diminished. Nzabanita beat Kagabo in round 1, lost to Murara in round 2 and did not show up in round 3. He defeated Florent Niyongira in round 4.

In round 5, the reigning champion was paired against Valentin Rukimbira who he defeated but his chances are still not clear, with his 3.0 points. In round 6 he defeated Ivan Mugisha and was fifth on the table, with 4.0 points. Nzabanita's round 7 loss to Kabera means he almost gives up on the title chase.

In round 8, Kabera was paired with Zimurinda, a man who ruthlessly poured ice water on Murara's chances on Saturday. Munyurangabo also faced Nzabanita whose hopes to retain the coveted title first took an unexpected dive during round 2 on Boxing Day.

Come Sunday evening, Sandrine Uwase will retain the female national chess championship title for a record third consecutive year after she conquered her first four opponents and maintained a convincing lead in the first two days of the tournament. The final round 5in the women section was also due to started at 3pm.

jkaruhanga@newtimesrwanda.com

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Chess: CM Kabera, Munyurangabo in tight title race ahead of final round - The New Times

Vote: The player of the year 2019 – Chessbase News

12/25/2019 Another eventful chess year is behind us, with great events and tournaments, impressive personalities and fantastic chess games. Help us choose the player of the year, the female player of the year, the game of the year, the combination of the year and the endgame of the year in our annual ChessBase reader poll. First up: The Player of the Year...

ChessBase 15 - Mega package

Find the right combination! ChessBase 15 program + new Mega Database 2020 with 8 million games and more than 80,000 master analyses. Plus ChessBase Magazine (DVD + magazine) and CB Premium membership for 1 year!

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For each poll, our editorial team has provided a list of nominees.Even with a panel involved, these are of course a bit subjective.And since we have limited ourselves to five players, undoubtedly some readers may miss theirfavoured choice.Our shortlist is one of many possible, we know!

The order of the players is arbitrary and you can votebelow.

Alongside Ding Liren and Wei Yi, Wang Hao is one of the greatest Chinese talents.He became a grand master at the age of 16 and since then has enjoyed numerous international successes.He won the Al Ain Classic in 2015, the HD Bank Cup in Ho Chi Minh City in 2016 and the Sharjah Masters and the Asian Continental Championships in 2017.But Wang celebrated the high point of his career so far in 2019. In addition to repeating histriumph in Ho Chi Minh City by winning 9th HD BankCup, in October, with his victory at the FIDE chess.com Grand Swiss tournament on the Isle of Man, perhaps the strongest open tournament of all time, he qualified for the 2020 Candidates Tournament in Yekaterinburg. Thatmakeshim the second Chinese player after Ding to make it into this or anyCandidates Tournament.

Wang Hao with the Isle of Man win | Photo: John Saunders

Alexander Grischuk has had a long and very successful career.Among other things, he has already participated in candidates competitions four times (2007, 2011, 2013 and 2018) and was world champion in blitz chess in 2006, 2012 and 2015.

In 2019, Grischuk qualified for his fifth candidates tournament thanks to his success at the Grand Prix tournaments in Moscow, Riga and Hamburg.

Alexander Grischuk at the Grand Prix | Photo: Niki Riga

For Magnus Carlsen, world champion since 2013 and number 1 in the world rankings since July 2011, this year was extremely successful.During the course of the year he played 77 games with classic time control, won 30, and drew47.So Carlsen not only remained unbeaten in 2019, but in fact he has not lost a single game at the tournament since Biel 2018 when he went down toShakhriyar Mamedyarov on July 31, 2018. That's107 classical gamesin a row!

Carlsen's record in 2019 corresponds to an Elo performance of 2893 and in the first half of the year Carlsen won every classical tournament he played in.

Magnus Carlsen has reasons to smile | Photo: Lennart Ootes

Teimour Radjabov had great success as a teenager.He became grandmaster in March 2001 at the age of 14, which made him the second youngest of all time.In 2003 he caused a sensation when be beat Garry Kasparov in a dramatic game at theLinares tournament.

In 2011 and 2013, Radjabov qualified for the candidates tournament and in November 2012 he reached as high as number 4 in the world rankings.But after his disappointing performance at the 2013 Candidates Tournament in London, Radjabov continued to slide down in the world rankings and, he says, was thinking about ending his chess career.

However, the Azerbaijani made a comeback at the World Cup 2019: he defeated Ding Liren in the final matchwinningthe tournament and thus qualified for the 2020 candidates.

Teimour Radjabov at the World Cup | Photo: Kyrill Merkuryev

Ding Liren wasthe first Chinese to qualify for a candidates tournament.In the past few years Ding has established himself among the world elite through consistently good results and strong play.From August 2017 to November 2018, he remained unbeaten in 100 games with a classical time control, and he also celebrated a number of successes in 2019.

In August 2019, Ding won the Sinquefield Cup in St. Louis after beating Carlsen in the tiebreak the first time that Carlsen lost a tiebreak as the reigning World Champion.In October, Ding finished second in the World Cup for the second time in a row.He lost to Radjabov in the final, but qualified for the 2020 candidates tournament. The Chinesewas more successful at the Grand Chess Tourfinal in London in December: Ding won against Levon Aronian in the semi-finals of the tournament and then against Maxime Vachier-Lagrave in the final, which ensured overall victory in the 2019 Grand Chess Tour.

Ding Liren | Photo: Lennart Ootes

Who is your pick forthe "Player of the Year 2019"?

spieler-des-jahres-2019

Voting ends on 12/31/2019, at 22:00 UTC

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Vote: The player of the year 2019 - Chessbase News

HAchubby responds to claims she’s holding Pepe the Frog hostage – Dexerto

Popular Korean streamer HAchubby is well-known for her love of her Pepe the Frog plush, but lately viewers have hilariously become concerned that she's holding the soft toy against his will. She took to her broadcast to clear up the claims.

HAchubby is one of the breakout stars of Twitch in 2019, as her journey to learn English and discover meme culture has made her connect with thousands of viewers.

However, the streamer's love of Pepe the Frog took a hilarious turn when a joke clip accusing her of holding the plush hostage went viral in December, and now she's responded.

The popular streamer responded to her chat saying that the plush was in danger, and said "Pepe is here!" while holding the iconic frog in her hands, and turned to him to ask "Are you okay?"

Hilariously, HAchubby hid behind Pepe, and began to talk as him. "Yes, I'm not lonely!" the doll spoke aloud. "Oh, you aren't lonely. I am so happy! Thank you, Pepe!" the Twitch personality replied.

"Don't worry about me, I'm happy!" she made the plush say, before hugging him. Her chat then erupted into some accepting the frog's response, while others still claimed he was being held against his will.

The Korean streamer's ridiculous skit was in response to a clip that went viral from her December 21 broadcast, when she watched a fan-made video that had a voice over dub with the plush claiming he was being abused.

"I used to have a happy life. I was a normal frog. Then a few days later it started. The new girl is not nice!" the comedic video said, before it cut to various clips of the streamer poking the doll, or dropping it during past broadcasts.

"She attacks me almost every time she streams. I live in constant fear," the voice said, before a clip played of the frog falling off her desk. "I was not fine. That hurt a lot!" Pepe stated, while the Korean exclaimed that it was all a misunderstanding.

HAchubby has had an incredible year, as she only had 700 followers at the start in January, and has exploded in popularity due to hilarious viral clips of her learning about meme culture with her audience.

As of the time of this article, the Korean star has amassed a staggering 148,000 followers on Twitch, making her one of the fastest growing channels on the streaming platform.

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HAchubby responds to claims she's holding Pepe the Frog hostage - Dexerto

From Grumpy Cat to TikTok, this decade belonged to memes and their ability to unite the masses – iNews

OpinionFrom the political to the completely pointless, memes have brought unending happiness to some of the worst days on social media

Friday, 20th December 2019, 3:54 pm

The internet is a dark, dank place that has, arguably, allowed the most awful traits of human nature to thrive. While this has become markedly worse in the last 10 years, the 2010s also saw the rise of the single thing that makes this hellscape bearable: the meme.

British evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins first defined a "meme" in 1976 as a behaviour or idea passed from one animal to another through imitation. In online culture this word has come to mean an image, phrase or video - often humourous - that is rapidly copied and re-shared on social media with slight variations.

i's opinion newsletter: talking points from today

From the political to the completely pointless, memes have brought unending happiness to some of the worst days on social media. Among the fractures of disparate online cultures, memes are one of the few things that connect us. It is the most community-like medium we have, uniting us through shares and lols.

A shorthand language

One of the most joyous things about memes is that they are essentially a constantly evolving modern language, shared and understood by people around the world, regardless of what language they speak.

Scott Wark, an associate researcher at the University of Warwick, agrees. Internet memes are undoubtedly the most important popular culture medium online, he tells i.

One key example of this was 2012's "Grumpy Cat" - an animal, and meme, so popular it subsequently sparked merchandise, a film and multiple consumer endorsements. The picture featured a cat named Tardar Sauce with an extremely unhappy expression caused by an underbite and feline dwarfism.

At this time, the main format of memes were pictures with text above and below the image, and "Grumpy Cat" took this form, with people adding pessimistic captions as if the cat were speaking.

Wark explains that this format continued to reign in meme culture for a few years, up until the emergence of the "Doge" meme in 2013 which was developed from images of a Japanese photographers dog found on a blog.

In the meme, a Shiba Inu dog is seen in various poses, but there is brightly coloured text in the Comic Sans font plastered all over the picture. The idea is that the text represents the innermost thoughts of the dog (or person posting).

This style was far more abstract than "Grumpy Cat", and the image looks more chaotic as the text and image interact with one another.

This was a big moment. From then the style of memes radically shifted, marking the beginning of our creative approach to them and a more abstract way of presenting thoughts and opinions.

Moreover, the way Twitter and Instagram users can immediately understand a memes message with very little context is extraordinary, especially when they are constantly changing.

There's something incredibly powerful about how online communities have created a smart, witty way to converse with and understand one another, wherever they are in the world.

Mental health

While memes can unite the masses, they also appeal to specific groups. For instance, the rise of mental health memes in the mid-2010s allowed people with mental health conditions to identify and confide in one another while partaking in some cathartic dark humour.

After this came the rise of astrological memes which, in the same way, became a sub-culture for people wanting to self-deprecate and laugh about their negative characteristics.

These were particularly happy moments in internet culture as they offered a vessel to self-reflect and laugh at yourself. Amid trolling, online cancel culture and general negativity online, these memes offered a positive alternative.

The image began recirculating on bulletin site 4chan in 2015, as Donald Trump gained popularity on the site. It also featured on Reddit and a year later, The Daily Beast published a piece entitled "How Pepe the Frog Became a Nazi Trump Supporter and Alt-Right Symbol" outlining how an otherwise harmless figure had been turned into a symbol of monstrosity and vitriol.

It's fair to say this was one of the lowest points in meme history, demonstrating how innocent imagery can be adopted by the alt-right to perpetuate their messaging.

Next decade and the impact of TikTok

Looking into the next decade, it's clear that memes won't disappear - they will always adapt alongside online culture.

Wark believes TikTok, a video-sharing social network, has already laid the groundwork for this transition, and said it is essentially "memetic culture in overdrive".

Were seeing multiple versions of the same video but some go viral and others do not, and they have really slight differences separating them, he says.

We have already seen the crossover between Twitter and TikTok this year with the huge popularity of "Trying Kombucha for the First Time", in which stills taken from a video by TikTok user Brittany Tomlinson went viral and became a template for other memes. The first image showed her looking disgusted, while the other showed her looking more convinced, and the images paired together were used to highlight a pivot of opinion. It was an example of how users can take elements of videos and create a whole generation of new memes.

Wark adds that on TikTok, we're seeing users become even more creative with music and rhythm in a way the image format never afforded.

Whatever shape or form they're presented in, it's clear their ongoing transitions and transformations are a sign of their unwavering influence in modern communication. They don't disappear - they adapt. The 2020s will undoubtedly be a revolutionary and progressive time for them.

Ruchira Sharma is a staff writer at i

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From Grumpy Cat to TikTok, this decade belonged to memes and their ability to unite the masses - iNews