Skip to main content
Print This Page
Text Size
Scroll To Top
Join the AGA
Sign In
menu
Home
2026 Go Congress
Learn to Play Go
Find a Club
Events Calendar
News
AGA Ratings
Blogs
Home
News / Articles List
Details
News / Articles
GO ONLINE: E-BOOKS AND STEGANOGRAPHY
Published on 12/5/2010
It was only a matter of time.
The e-book revolution has come to the world of English-language go books.
Translator Bob Terry has
just published not one, but two books available only on the Kindle, Amazon's e-book reader.
The Startling Beauty of the Game of Go
contains 200 problems from every aspect of the game, the "cream of the crop" from
Kido
magazine, the resource of choice for Japanese players for decades, while
Amazing Happenings in the Game of Go
-- also drawn from the pages of Kido -- "is packed with material that has rarely been seen in the West," Terry tells the
E-Journal
. "It's part almanac, part teaching manual, part travelogue, part cultural treatise and part game collection," adds Terry, noting that this is just Volume 1 and that "each volume totals more than 1,000 pages" with "more than 30 games, with 15 fully annotated" between the two volumes. Terry -- who's also working on iPad versions of the books -- is the translator of the hard-copy
Heart of Go
series, Shuko's two-volume
The Only Move
series, Takemiya's
This Is Go The Natural Way
, and other works
.
Steganography
, our vocabulary word for this installment, refers to a process by which information is encoded in other information.
In ancient times, considerable ingenuity was required; Herodotus reported in 440 BC that one ruler concealed a message by shaving a slave's head, tattooing a message on his scalp, and sending him to deliver them message when his hair grew back. More recent uses include watermarking intellectual property online and hiding information in e-mail attachments, a sort of digital "invisible ink." If you like this kind of cloak-and-dagger stuff, you may enjoy a 2005 article we recently found and posted at
The Bob High Memorial Library
, entitled
"A General Methodology and Its Applications to the Game of Go."
The authors have developed
Stegogo
, a program that encodes information in game diagrams. Reading this article, go author and scholar
Peter Shotwell
was reminded of an old mystery novel he had read,
The Chinese Lake Murders
, where crucial details were found encoded in a game diagram.
Click here
for a brief article Shotwell contributed to the Library that provides more detail; you'll find articles there that explore many other facets of the game as well, including a recently-posted
short version
of Shotwell's Appendix V of the Origins article--the one that revamps early go history.
Return to Previous Page
Menu Links
Learn to Play Go
Find a Club
Events Calendar
News
Go Congress
Ratings
Site Search
Other Links
About the AGA
American Go Foundation
Youth
Tournaments
Forums
Elections
AGA Code of Conduct
Documents
Archived Website
Contact Us
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
Get the AGA E-Journal
Get important Go news from the AGA, links to upcoming events and new blog posts.
Subscribe/Unsubscribe
Make a Donation to the AGA
The AGA runs on the generosity of people like you
Donate Today
1997-2022 American Go Association
Powered by ClubExpress
Email Us
contact@usgo.org
Watch our livestreams
Follow us on social media