Hon'inbō Chihaku
Hon'inbō Chihaku (本因坊知伯, 1710–1733) was a Japanese professional go player, and sixth head of the Hon'inbō house.
Hon'inbō Chihaku | |
---|---|
Full name | Hon'inbō Chihaku |
Kanji | 本因坊知伯 |
Born | 1710 Japan |
Died | 1733 Japan |
Rank | 6 dan |
He was a nephew of Hon'inbō Dōchi. He died young, before an official heir had been appointed.
Oshirogo
- 1722 against Inoue Insetsu Inseki (B with three stones, won)
- 1723 against Hayashi Bonkyu (B with two stones, jigo)
- 1725 against Hayashi Incho (B with two stones, W), against Inoue Yuseki (B, lost)
- 1726 against Inoue Insetsu Inseki (B, jigo)
- 1727 against Yasui Senkaku, (B, jigo)
- 1728 against Hayashi Incho, (B, won)
- 1730 against Inoue Shunseki (W, lost)
- 1731 against Inoue Shunseki, (B, won)
- 1733 against Inoue Shunseki (W, lost)
Sources
- GoGod Encyclopedia
Preceded by Hon'inbō Dōchi |
Hon'inbō 1727–1733 |
Succeeded by Hon'inbō Shūhaku |
gollark: You can look here if you want to know more: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulldozer_(microarchitecture)
gollark: Fascinating.
gollark: This is why AMD was basically irrelevant for many years until Zen back in 2017 or so.
gollark: Each pair of "cores" shares a bunch of resources, so it isn't really as fast as an actual "core" in other designs, and I think their IPC was quite bad too, so the moderately high clocks didn't do very much except burn power.
gollark: See, while the FX-4100 is allegedly a fairly high-clocked quad-core, this is misleading. AMD's Bulldozer architecture used "clustered multithreading", instead of the "simultaneous multithreading" on modern architectures and also Intel's ones at the time.
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