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Chess: Scotland’s Freddy Waldhausen Gordon, 15, routs the English in British Rapidplay

about 7 hours ago
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Freddy Waldhausen Gordon, a 15-year-old from George Heriot’s school, Edinburgh, came through with a stunning burst to capture the annual British Rapidplay championship in Peterborough with a score of 9.5/11, defeating the top-seeded GM, Gawain Maroroa Jones, in the final round in a must-win game by a checkmating attack where White’s queen and both rooks all invaded Black’s rear rank.Maroroa Jones was in trouble early in the decisive game, soon had to concede rook for knight, and a second loss of the exchange followed at move 32.At the end, 39 Rxg7+ and 40 Qg8 mate could only be delayed by Black giving up his queen.It was the 37th staging of the British Rapidplay, whose fast time limit of all the moves in 15 minutes for each player, plus a 10 seconds increment per move, makes it possible to hold an entire 11-round tournament in a single weekend.

More than 200 players competed.No Scot had ever won it previously.First prize was £1500.The Four Nations Chess League organisation on behalf of the English Chess Federation was excellent.Final scores were Waldhausen Gordon (Scotland) 9.

5/11, Jones and Shreyas Royal (England) 9, Yichen Han (Netherlands), the 12-year-old Supratit Banerjee and Siva Mahadevan (India) 8.5.Eight players on 8 points included Trisha Kanyamarala (Ireland), Harriet Hunt (England), and the 11-year-old Bodhana Sivanandan (England), who tied for the women’s title.All three women’s co-champions received £500.Waldhausen Gordon, Royal, Banerjee and Sivanandan are teenagers or pre-teens, but whereas he last three are all being helped with their tournament expenses and coaching by the £1.

5m grant which the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, has made available for the most promising English talents, Waldhausen Gordon will receive precisely zero due to devolution rules,Chess Scotland officials have been defeated in their attempts to secure help from Holyrood for either the national team, for which Waldhausen Gordon was a star performer at the 2025 European championships in Batumi, Georgia, or for the teenager personally,The Chess Scotland chair, Alex McFarlane, wrote in the English Chess Forum: “As an example of the frustration that can be encountered, I was seeking money from Glasgow,I met with someone from leisure who was sympathetic but not in their remit so try culture,Same result but this time I was told to try education.

I did, but was met by: ‘Sorry, try leisure.’ I admit I gave up at that point.”Waldhausen Gordon is already proving himself as a candidate for Scotland’s most exciting chess talent of all time, potentially surpassing the three-time British champion Jonathan Rowson and George Henry Mackenzie, who won at Frankfurt 1887 ahead of most of the elite players of his era.In one of the chess.com Titled Tuesday events in January 2025, Waldhausen Gordon even defeated the world No 1, Magnus Carlsen, when the Norwegian overstepped the time limit in an ending a pawn down with a +1.

54 advantage for the Scot.Waldhaussen Gordon has made substantial progress in the past few weeks.Last month he achieved his final qualification for the IM title in Graz, Austria, while in Peterborough last weekend he already performed at GM level, with a tournament performance rating of 2613 against what would have been the GM norm of 2600 in a classical event.Maroroa Jones may well consider himself unlucky.The Yorkshire grandmaster played a near-perfect tournament, starting with eight straight victories, drawing easily with Black against his assumed main rival, Michael Adams, in round nine, drawing again against the solid Royal in round 10, then finding himself overwhelmed by the Scot at the death.

Royal was another who did little wrong, but fell half a point short.England’s youngest grandmaster, 17, had six Blacks, including a draw against Jones which went down to bare kings.His final round victory, complete with a queen sacrifice, was among his best wins.Banerjee is fast emerging as the jewel in the crown in Reeves’s investment.The Sutton grammar pupil, 12, who spends only an hour or two on chess on weekday evenings due to school homework, qualified for his first IM norm at the 2025 British Championship and continued his fine run last m onth when he won chess.

com’s competitive under-13 online championship ahead of an international field,At Peterborough, Banerjee was unbeaten with a 2498 performance, which would have been easily an IM norm in a classical tournament,His results included a final round win over the 2024 Rapidplay champion, GM Daniel Gormally, where his clever tactic snared a knight and the game, plus a victory over the strong IM Peter Roberson where he ruthlessly exploited his opponent’s poor selection of a square for the queen at move 24,The three women co-champions all scored impressively,An 8/11 total is well above the norm for female players in a mixed event.

Hunt, the former world under-20 girls champion, met by far the strongest field of the trio.Kanyamarala lost in round one, but recovered well.Sivanandan was lucky in the final round when IM Richard Bates forgot about his clock and lost on time in a drawn position.Sivanandan is being freely compared to the all-time Nos 1 and 2 women, Judit Polgar and Hou Yifan, but the two legends both made huge jumps in strength from age 11 onwards.It remains to be seen whether the talented Harrow schoolgirl can match their pace.

Next Wednesday, Sivanandan will start among the 436 players in the historic Reykjavik Open, staged annually since 1964 when Mikhail Tal won, and including a rest-day excursion to Bobby Fischer’s grave,Her target will be her second WGM norm, following her first in France last year, and requiring a 2400 performance, which she missed only narrowly in Cannes last month,4016: 1…Nxh3+! 2 gxh3 ( if 2 Kh2 Nxf2+ 3 Kg1 Ng4 soon leads to mate) Qxg3+! 3 fxg3 Rxf1+ 4 Kh2 Rh1 mate,
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Cryptocurrency firms suffer heavy losses in Illinois primaries after spending big

The cryptocurrency industry spent big and lost often in this week’s Illinois primaries.As the industry prepares to make massive donations in the 2026 midterm elections to replicate its success in 2024, the Illinois losses mark an early setback for firms that are trying to establish themselves as power players in American politics.Crypto companies flooded the state’s Democratic primaries with millions of dollars to promote candidates they believed would have a light touch when it came to regulating digital assets. AI firms, meanwhile, backed opposing candidates and seemed to cancel each other out.Using Super Pacs that are allowed to spend unlimited sums of money, crypto and AI companies ran television advertising and distributed campaign fliers that only occasionally alluded to their industries

about 19 hours ago
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Lack of funding is stifling scientific research | Letter

Liz Kendall is right to warn that the UK must not let quantum computing talent slip through its fingers (UK must learn lessons from AI race and retain its quantum computing talent, says minister, 17 March).However, UK Research and Innovation’s current funding decisions risk doing exactly that.The government has announced £1bn for quantum computing, but it is cutting support for fundamental research in particle physics, astronomy and nuclear physics (PPAN). These are not separate issues. It is precisely the kind of blue-sky research funded through PPAN that trains the scientists and develops the ideas that underpin emerging technologies like quantum computing

about 20 hours ago
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US startup advertises ‘AI bully’ role to test patience of leading chatbots

Imagine a day at work where your main task is to pick a fight with a computer. No meetings, no emails – just you, a chair and a chatbot with the maddening tendency to think it has the cleverest mind in the room.The job title alone raises an eyebrow: “AI bully”. But this is precisely what a California startup called Memvid is offering: $800 to spend eight hours testing the patience and memory of artificial intelligence.“You’ll spend a full eight-hour day interacting with leading AI chatbots – and your only job is to be brutally honest about how frustrating they are,” the company’s job listing states

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‘All right mate?’: Amazon pins UK hopes on AI upgrade of Alexa

“Commiserations, mate, Chelsea lost 3-0 in the Champions League last night against Paris Saint-Germain,” says Alexa as it attempts to break the news gently to an awaiting Blues fan.Such is the injection of personality and understanding that Amazon hopes will lead to Britons re-engaging with their millions of Alexa devices, restoring it to the cutting edge of voice assistants rather than resigned to being a glorified egg timer.After its early access launch last year in the US, the long-awaited generative AI upgrade Alexa+ is finally making its debut in the UK, supporting eight years of existing devices strewn through more than half of UK households.With the UK being Amazon’s most engaged market and more than 40 accents to contend with across the UK and Ireland, the “next-generation ambient AI assistant” has its work cut out for it.The service will be available immediately for new purchases of Amazon’s latest generation of Echo and Show devices, with an invite system in operation for existing devices, which Amazon’s head of Alexa and Echo, Daniel Rausch, insists will progress faster than it did in the US

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Inside China’s robotics revolution

Chen Liang, the founder of Guchi Robotics, an automation company headquartered in Shanghai, is a tall, heavy-set man in his mid-40s with square-rimmed glasses. His everyday manner is calm and understated, but when he is in his element – up close with the technology he builds, or in business meetings discussing the imminent replacement of human workers by robots – he wears an exuberant smile that brings to mind an intern on his first day at his dream job. Guchi makes the machines that install wheels, dashboards and windows for many of the top Chinese car brands, including BYD and Nio. He took the name from the Chinese word guzhi, “steadfast intelligence”, though the fact that it sounded like an Italian luxury brand was not entirely unwelcome.For the better part of two decades, Chen has tried to solve what, to him, is an engineering problem: how to eliminate – or, in his view, liberate – as many workers in car factories as technologically possible

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‘We don’t tell the car what it should do’: my ride in a self-driving taxi

Driverless ‘robotaxis’ will be accepting fares in Britain’s biggest city by the end of next year. Can they deal with London’s medieval roads, hordes of pedestrians and errant ebikers? I got in the passenger seat to find out‘I’m really excited to show you this,” says Alex Kendall, the CEO of Wayve, as he gets behind the wheel of one of the company’s electric Ford Mustangs. Then he does … nothing. The car pulls up to a junction at a busy road in King’s Cross, London, all by itself. “You can see that it’s going to control the speed, steering, brake, indicators,” he says to me – I’m in the passenger seat

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Meta AI agent’s instruction causes large sensitive data leak to employees

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Why is the FBI buying people’s location data and how is it using the information?

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Sixteen international games and a franchise overseas: is the NFL’s global ambition good or greed?

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Chess: Scotland’s Freddy Waldhausen Gordon, 15, routs the English in British Rapidplay

about 7 hours ago