I am not good at playing chess. When I was younger I never liked acctualy that game. My uncle from Osijek plays great and he's the best chess player I ever personally met. I never won against him. Later on I understood what's the beauty:-) Strategy and tactic. It's great tool for training a perception. At least that 's my opinion. Here and there you get pissed off because you didn't saw obvious. Why I didn't see it coming? Why my "lady "needs to die ? Just one wrong move and you're gone.
I allways taught Kasparov or Fisher ( famous chess players ) have great sense for logic and are very intelligent. They are indeed. But according to Sheng He, Ph.D, an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Minnesota, chess strategy may rely more heavily on spatial processing than on logic and computational skills.
And further conclusion goes:
Researchers at the University of Minnesota at Minneapolis used functional magnetic resonance imaging to scan the brains of novice players during a match and found a flurry of activity in the parietal and occipital lobes, areas not associated with general intelligence.
http://www.pakatak.co.uk/surveillance/surveillance.htm
http://www.pakatak.co.uk/cctv/cctv.htm
http://www.pakatak.co.uk/camera/camera.htm
http://www.pakatak.co.uk/dvr/digital-video-recorder.htm
http://www.pakatak.co.uk/usb-phone/usb-phone.htm
http://www.pakatak.co.uk/baby-monitor/baby-monitor.htm
Posted by: surveillance | 17.04.2004 at 02:49 PM
surveillance equipment issues really apply here. After all, with all that cctv equipment around, and security cameras around, no wonder we don;t feel safe and want to point fingers. After all, you can now use a DVR system on your PC to play back what the cameras show. And you can even use a USB phone to your computer now. And have you seen the sort of baby monitor they want to push on us now?
Posted by: bobby | 17.04.2004 at 02:47 PM