Thursday, February 28, 2013

Post Gammon Update

"How long do I think the game will last?  Well considering how long it takes Jake to move, it could be another five years to a decade!" -Alex Vittal, June 2011



As you may or may not know, Alex Vittal and Jake Padilla are currently engaged in a match of backgammon via post cards.  They started in June 2006.  They're still playing their first game.  I'm not going into the whole history; I'm just giving an update on their status.

The latest card to be made public is this: a redouble by Alex to 4 points.  The cube is in Jake's hands!  Will Jake accept the double and make post gammon even more intense, or will he drop and finally bring and end to the saga?  What's more important here, strategy or playing out the game no matter the costs?  Jake has in fact decided, made his move, and mailed it to Alex.

In the picture above Alex is playing the red pieces, and Jake is playing green.  Alex has the next roll of the dice.  Here's another board with the same position as theirs that may be easier to read. Alex is brown here, and Jake is white.  Pay no heed to the dice.



As you can see, things are not looking great for Jake, but lets hope that he took the double! I did a little amateur analysis of Alex's possible moves if he gets a roll from this position. Now the game is, shockingly, near the end, but there are a few scenarios that could send some blots flying for both sides! Am I rooting for Alex or Jake to win? No. Neither, in fact, because a win would mean the end. I'm rooting for a prolonged game! It's already been going on for over 6 years; let's go for ten!

I wont go into great detail just in case Alex reads this before his turn, but here's a summary of what is likely. (Again, Jake has already decided to either accept or decline, and he has mailed his postcard, so any insight is now hindsight to him.) I thought about each roll and what I think Alex would likely do. These are my predictions of what Jake will face if he gets another turn. Out of 36 possible rolls:

Vittal Blot: 10/36
No Vittal Blot: 26/36

Padilla on the Bar: 17/36
No Padilla on the Bar: 19/36

Running Game: 3/36
Almost a Running Game: 14/36
No Running Game: 19/36

Great rolls for Jake: 2/36
Good rolls for Alex that still give Jake hope: 22/36
Great rolls for Alex: 12/36


As soon as we get any other updates from these two, we'll post the photos here! Keep your fingers crossed for an accepted double and more Post Gammon Insanity!


-Sleeve

This Moon's Match: Spreadsheet

This Moon's Match


John Bartolomeo and I once played a 5 point match in a car while he was driving.  Our game was interrupted by two police officers.  What I'm about to tell you though was even more dangerous than that.

We go now to the weekend in Colombia.  After watching a movie about people playing Catan, I challenged a few friends to a game of online Catan.  Kyle and I were set to square off Sunday night, but we couldn't get the site to work on his computer, so we played some  backgammon on Yahoo Games.  A day later, I saw John online and challenged him to a game.  We couldn't get Yahoo Games to work on his computer.  "Is there another way?" he asked.

John: can we play gnu backgammon?
Yo: Gno
  i don't think so
 John: hahaha
 Yo: WAIT
  JOHN
  I KNOW
 John: YA?!
19:31 Yo: HAHAHA YES!
 John: POST GAMMON!!! ?????
 Yo: better!
19:32 ok check your google drive in like 15 seconds

I remembered a spreadsheet. 

Once upon a time, Alex Vittal and I were flying together from Spokane to Phoenix, and neither one of us had a backgammon board!  Weird.  I said, Alex, don't worry, I have GNU Gammon on my computer.  But before I knew it, he was on Google Drive creating a board in a shared spreadsheet.  Alex even added two cells that generate random numbers between 1-6 every time the spreadsheet is refreshed (which happens each time it is edited.)  We tried writing some code to make a die, well actually we didn't, we just imagined that someone would be able to do that.  Even though we were stuck with those random cells, they work!

Several months later, I finally put this beauty to use in a game with John.  It has quirks for sure, when he moved his pieces, they often did not show up on my screen (Chrome on Windows 7 starter), but with the chat feature in the spreadsheet we worked it out.  

And I won the game!  A few doubles near the end sealed the deal for me.  So I've got a 2-0 lead in the 2013 Spreadsheet Tournament.


[quote from our instant message where I challenge John.]
19:06 Yo: i challenge you to backgammon!!!
 John: WHAT?!
19:07 OK!!!!!
  I have no idea how!
19:08 Yo: k
  moment
19:09 http://games.yahoo.com/
games/login2?page=bg&ss=1
19:11 go to the seahorse grotto
19:12 John: oh no! do i need to make an account?
 Yo: yes!
John: oh! crap! hold on!
19:13 Yo: K!
19:14 John: haha I am using my friend's old account from high school!
  we played online pool!
  alright!
 Yo: hell yes!
 John: can't believe i remembered the password!
  it's been 10 years!!
19:15 Yo: haha amazing!
 John: haha darn it! it says that since i had to reactivate it, I have to wait 24 hours!
  hold on!
19:16 Yo: what the crap?!
19:19 John: almost there!
19:22 Yo: "Mom omg"
 John: yep!
19:25 waiting for applet to load
  i have filled out 5 passwords
 Yo: hahah excellent
19:28 John: welp, it just installed a million shits on my computer and refuses to load!
  what the heck!
19:29 is there another way we could play?
 Yo: HAHAHA
  ok, yes, probably!
  hmmm,
19:30 try shutting off your browser and then starting it again
 John: can we play gnu backgammon?
Yo: Gno
  i don't think so
 John: hahaha
 Yo: WAIT
  JOHN
  I KNOW
 John: YA?!
19:31 Yo: HAHAHA YES!
 John: POST GAMMON!!! ?????
 Yo: better!
19:32 ok check your google drive in like 15 seconds
  https://docs.google.com/
spreadsheet/ccc?key=
0AjRDtc5aXrXKdFlvWmxrRWhlemdlV
E5FUllIWUpTYnc&usp=sharing
  or just click that
 John: NO WAY!
  HOW DID YOU DO THAT?!?!
19:34 Yo: HAHAHAHAH
  Well alex made it once when we were on the plane together
  we didn't have a board
19:35 OK, so there are notes on the first sheet that you can read for an explanation
  sample
19:36 hmm, neverminde, there are not notes. they were on the other spreadsheet i copied
  but they didn't get copied
 John: ok
  so I just rolled a 6 as an opening roll
  what did you roll?
19:38 hmm I am feeling very lucky today, I believe I will be rolling many double sixes
 Yo: Wait, not yet. OK which page are you on?
19:39 also did you get that the "roll" button really doesn't work?
 John: this virtual board is genius
Yo: and that anytime you edit the sheet the roll change


s




19:41 

also click on "game board"
  

at the bottom
19:43 John: this is incredible!
20:15 http://fc08.deviantart.
net/fs70/f/2010/021/b/3/Angel_
Kitties_hugging_by_
KaminariKatsuya.jpg

Concrete Strategy Part 1: Build A Wall



Pee Wee Wiggins Audio  (Click here for a recording of Pee Wee Wiggins talking about backgammon strategy.)

Tip of the Moon: Published at the Crescent (when was the last crescent?? Ha, ha. Oops.)

The E Bob Oboe S. E. A. B. C. will take the liberty to publish a basic strategy guide. We start with the concrete basics to build a slab which you may use as a pad to launch your majestic rocket of strategy into the orbit of advanced play. Once there, moves and strategy become less and less certain to the point of peril. We have sent backgammon games into orbit before, and we have sent missions to the moon, but honestly, some of these missions failed miserably and caused many casualties. Making no guarantees of safety once you get there, let us help you launch into space:

To accomplish this, we turn to the advice of old people.  Our first guest expert is Pee Wee Wiggins.  Wiggins is 92 years old and living in South Dakota on his nephew's farm.  His favorite animals are goats and cats.  Here's Pee Wee:

Lesson #1: Trap your opponent with a wall.
Well hello everyone, and I hope this little message finds you well.  I'm a backgammon player, I've been one for many years, and I hope that I can tell you a little story to help you play the game better, or maybe just learn some of the rules.  Before we talk strategy, I've got a few words to share about the backgammon pieces.  These little guys have some strange quirks that you've just got to remember, or you'll end up in a pickle.  Now first of all, a piece can only move six points at a time.  Of course, a piece may get two, three, or four moves in one turn, but each one of these moves is at the most six spaces. They can't move more. They will never move 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, or 12. You see, they'll only move what is shown on one die, and in backgammon the dice are market 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. 

Now, when I was playin as a youngster, I used to mess up this rule all the time.  I'd try rolling, and I'd say, "oh look, I got an 8!" But you know what?  Those little backgammon pieces, they'd right up and tell me, "Pee Wee, that's not an 8, that's a 5-3, and if you think we're gonna move 8 well you better go take a flyin leap through a rollin doughnut, and then you can go suck an egg."  Well, I learned pretty quick that these pieces will not add the dice together.  I tried teachin em.  Yep, I even brought them to my school house with me and set them right down on my desk as I was addin my figures, but these pieces wouldn't hear one lick of it! 

To a backgammon piece, a roll of 5-3 isn't 8, it's 5 and 3.  Now like I said, any piece will move two times on your turn. Some might whine a little, but in my experience, most of them love the extra turn.    Whenever I roll doubles, at least three different pieces on my side are begging me to use all four moves on them! "Pick me, pick me!" they'd all be shoutin.  So if you do use two separate moves (or three or four!) on one piece, it might end up more than 6 points away from where they started, but each individual move is 6 or less.  And you can stick that rule in your back pocket, because it's oldern dirt and it aint goin nowhere.  So, uh, with a 5-3 roll, you can't move one piece 8, but you can move it 5 and then you can move it again, 3 more.

Now, we don't exactly know why these pieces won't move more than six at a time, because we don't know much about the emotions or motivation of backgammon pieces, nor is there a human field of science working toward understandin them so. Personally, I love to speculate about the lives of backgammon pieces, and I love making up new stories about why their quirks and various behaviors. Maybe it's a reflection of their preference for several snacks instead of large meals. Perhaps in a past life they were little propeller planes crossing the ocean by island hopping, but they sure aint large jets taking off in Los Angeles and flying non stop to Tokyo. 

Well, my niece, Emily Lime is her name, is studyin those little backgammon pieces.  I said before that there wasn't a human science studying them, but I guess she's fixin to start one.  Right now she's got to theories; the first one being that the pieces have their own religion, of which the guiding principle is "many small movements, not one large jump," and the second one being that these little pieces simply have a physical limitation, either they don't have the physical stamina to move farther than 6 spaces in one go or their vision can only see clearly for six points, and they wont move where they cannot see.

Irregardless of the reason, all this works out so that to cross a long distance, backgammon pieces must handle each die separately, and they can't make big jumps. And this here is the part you've got to listen to real close and don't tell no one about!  Because, you see, you can use this rule against your opponent! 


"Now how, Pee Wee?" I bet you're all thinking.  Well now just hold on a minute, and I'll tell you.  Imagine that you have two pieces on the talc, and your opponent has two on the iron.  Now, if they were to roll a 1-1, could they move?  Well...  NO, because all they have to move is just one number, 1, and that one is blocked!  And remember, the pieces can't move 2 or 3 or 4, because the dice say 1.  Those pieces on the iron only have one option, moving 1, and it's blocked by your team!  Listen and I bet you can hear 'em squealin like a stuck hog.  



Well now that you've got that picture in your mind, imagine that your opponent is still on the iron, but now you've got your entire home board all full up with pairs of two, and on top of that you've also got the bar point!  From the bar point all the way down to the talk, each and every point has two of your pieces.  A pretty sight, aint it?  Ok, now imagine any roll for your opponent.  Those dice are shaking around, ooh, they rolled a 6-5!  Well, can they move 6?  No sir, you've blocked the bar point.  Can they move 5?  No siree, you've blocked the adamantium.  But can they move 11, making the Lover's Leap?  HA! Not in a million years!  Go ahead and try 'til the cows come home, but those pieces will not add the dice.  And your opponent rolled 6 and 5, not 11.  If they rolled one die with 11 dots on it, then you better tell them to cut it out our you'll rat to their parents.  

And with any roll, even quadruple 6, they'll always be stuck!  Once you block the six points directly in front of them, they'll never move their pieces, no way and no how.

So there's the secret that can win it all for ya.  Trap your opponent by building a wall of six occupied points. Ok, well, have a good day, and keep up the practice.  I've played a lot of backgammon in my 92 years, and I'll say that if you keep practicing, you can get pretty good at this game.  So good job.

-Pee Wee Wiggins

Credits:
"Concerning Hobbits", The Hobbit, J.R.R. Tolkien.
Cosmicomics, Italo Calvino.
The first strategy and rule book I read was The Backgammon Book, by Jacoby and Crawford. Paul Magriel's book has been highly recommended to me.

Backgammon Wonders of the World: The Backgammon Wall




Once upon a time, well ok, in August of 2008, I was cleaning my house with Alex.  There were many others cleaning, too, it was a big house with lots of messes, but at the time Alex and I were alone in a room cleaning.  Well, taking a break from cleaning.  Ok, here's what I remember for sure:  we were sitting on a couch in a room full of things ready to be taken to Goodwill.  We had also just moved a large  stadium seating apparatus out of that room and taken down a movie screen.  We now had a room full of crap and an ugly blank unused wall.  

"Geez, look around, this room is full of crap and that wall is ugly!"  Alex got up and picked up a few spare backgammon boards from the stack.  I remember seeing him walk toward the wall and holding the boards up to the wall, but I don't remember if he said anything.  At that moment, my brain was exploding.  At that moment, the Backgammon Wall was born.

Clearly, what this ugly blank unused wall needed was a beautiful, colorful, and playable backgammon mural!  Alex was moving to Colorado in one week, so along with Annissa, Hanna, Kasey, and Brendan, we got to work immediately, sketching a scale plan and brainstorming colors.  After considering literally every option in the rainbow, including the rainbow itself!, we bought paint for black and grey points on a red board.  

What a busy week! That was also my first week back at work after summer break, and every day I'd come home to a full slate of of stencils, tape, rollers, brushes, trays, and trips to the hardware store.  Like I said, Alex was moving in one week, so we worked late into the night every night to finish.  We took our time, though; it was not a rush job.  We all loved backgammon, and we saw the glory of this wall from the get go.  Quality was the watchword.    Alex and I got in at least one protracted fight during the painting process, I'm not sure why, but I think it was about arguing over painting methods.  

To play on the board, we put 144 thumb tacks in the wall and painted 30 paper plates to hang on them as the playing pieces.  Later another roommate made two giant dice out of cardboard boxes, and I made a giant doubling cube.  Once it was finished, it was gorgeous and fully functional!  


The Backgammon Wall lasted from August 2008 until June 2011, nearly three years.  It was truly a wonder. Please come again soon, Wall!







HANNA THANKS FOR THE PICTURES!!!!!!!!!!!!



Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Funny Little Backgammon Shark Gets Double Sixes

I have some posts that are late.  While you wait, watch this video and ponder the many meanings of the word shark.


P.S. If this were a video of my family 20 years ago, each one of my sisters and I would be doing the exact same thing as this child, and my dad would be yelling, "Come on, Double Sixes, Mama needs a new pair of shoes!!"

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Ooops!

I played online backgammon (on a google spreadsheet) and practiced spanish last night, both great, but I did not post new stories! Ah, the moon is waning!  Soon!

Monday, February 25, 2013

Full Moon February 25th

Today is the Full Moon, and I'll add a few posts late tonight.  I've finally got the finished interview with Pee Wee Wiggins about "building a wall", we'll have another "Match of the Moon", Catalina Suarez has written a piece about one of the "Backgammon Wonders of the World", and we may get an update from Jake and Alex on Post Gammon!

The moon will be full at 3:26 P.M. in Bogotá.  This is the Life Moon according to the post-post-new-old moon calendar; remember and celebrate the phenomenon of life in all it's forms if that's your thing.  The full moon rises at sunset (the full moon that happens for an instant at 3:26 P.M.)  Tonight in the Americas the moon will come up a bit after the sun goes down.  Maybe in places further east it will rise before the sun sets tonight.  Find a hill and enjoy!  Also, please don't believe anything you read on the internet because it's probably wrong.  I think I've got a pretty good handle on my moon astrology, but double check me before you pass on any of this info.











Sunday, February 10, 2013

New Moon Backgammon Links

Phil Simborg is a backgammon player who has a few good youtube videos with tips about taking pieces off, and maybe some other things, I can't remember.  I think he also has some marching band videos of his daughter.  Hmm.  Well, check out his youtube, at least one of the videos has good advice!! 

But to stop there is a bit ignorant. Simborg is a world class teacher who also teaches at mindgamescenter.com for pay, and he has several articles on the epic site "Backgammon Galore" (that site probably has the most backgammon content that's both free and quality.)  I have not watched all of his youtube videos, so I don't know how many backgammon tips he gives.  However, the one I did watch was about advanced bearing off techniques from Kit Woolsey, another world class player.  Thanks, Phil!

Matt Singer made a gorgeous suede and leather roll up backgammon board with snaps and a zipper, then sold out of all of them!  This set you can't buy also includes a custom wagering die that "decides what's at stake for the loser (in the form of a mild punishment). The sides of the wagering die read (DEAD ARMNOOGIEWET WILLYDUTCH RUBSNAKE BITE, & PURPLE NURPLE)."  $240. [spits drink]


When I first found "Backgammon Moments", I thought perhaps I'd found another blog doing the same thing as the Backgammon Hearth!  Not quite.  This blog does have articles about backgammon history and news, but otherwise it is about basic rules, strategy and poker.  I didn't really read the basic strategy or rules guides.  The site is also full of links to gambling websites, which gives me the impression that the author is simply trying to make money.  It also has the really annoying feature that whenever you click on the page it takes you back to the home page.  ?!?!  However, I did find a link to the crazy stories about the Russian Backgammon Murder from 2008 and the 134 year old Georgia woman who plays backgammon and drinks vodka.  Also, the blog's first post was about playing backgammon with his siblings growing up.  Still, kind of a weird site.

And here's the story about the Backgammon Murder!!  Via RIA Novosti, a Russian news service, two men in Moscow shared a cab, then struck up a friendship in 2008. It ended in a game of backgammon to the death played on a board made by the soon to be murderer in a stint in a labor camp.
"We agreed that he who lost would die," Smirnitsky told an investigator in a recorded interview posted on the Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper's website, adding: "He lost."  "Didn't you feel sorry for him?" asked the investigator.  "I did," came the impassive reply. 
Smirnitsky also said that although he often played backgammon and did not always win, this was the first time he had played for such high stakes.
Smirnitsky was caught when he asked his neighbor for help dragging the body from the eighth floor down to the street. Somehow this all sounds to weird to be true, but I think it actually happened. I don't know, however, if the winning roll was a 5-2. The story on the English RIA Novosti says "after Smirnitsky had beaten his young opponent, he went into the kitchen, chose a knife, and plunged it five times into Lobozov's neck." 5 times in2. 5-2. Woah.

Finally, check out this painting by the Le Nain brothers called "The Backgammon Players". Hooray. This really boring painting is from sometime in the early 1600s in France. If you want more current backgammon pictures, we have a feed of pictures form flickr on the side bar. I also highly reccomend the #backgammon on Instagram! K. Viva le Tric Trrraque!!


HERE I'M SORRY FOR POSTING THIS BORING PAINTING, PLEASE FORGIVE ME AND ENJOY THIS LINK TO A WEB VIEWER OF #BACKGAMMON ON INSTAGRAM!!!


"Oh yeah. They're all looking at me."

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Freegammon



Take a break from competitive play.  


Take a break from rules.  

Take a break from a destination and from a road.  

Freegammon. 

To explain the rules, I must finish before I start.  

Freegammon is blank, freegammon is a wild ocean reef, freegammon is the unconscious mind.