Sente and Gote
The concepts of sente and gote are important in higher-level Go strategy.
A player whose moves compel the opponent to respond in a local position is said to have sente (先手), meaning the player has the initiative; the opponent is said to have gote (後手). Sente means ‘preceding move’ (lit: ‘before hand’), whereas gote means ‘succeeding move’ (lit: after hand').
One player attacks in sente; the other defends in gote. In most games, the player who is able to maintain sente controls the flow of the game and therefore has a significant advantage. A player usually accepts gote in order to defend a weak position or to achieve a local advantage such as securing territory.
🐕🦺 Leadership
Managing Technical Debt in a Microservice Architecture
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The 5 Common Mistakes Of New Engineering Managers
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To share the work, share the decisions
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💻 Tech
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Designing Netflix
Another piece in the series of system design interview walkthroughs.
The life of MS-DOS
A history lesson about the evolution of MS-DOS for those who are old enough to remember :)
Predicting OverWatch™ Match Outcomes with 90% Accuracy
The math behind the prediction function for OpenSkill
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