[Welcome to Sensei's Library!]

StartingPoints
ReferenceSection
About


Referenced by
WeiqiZhongjiJieti...
Tsumego/Discussion
MemorizingFirst50...
MGSOnKoreanGoBooks

 

Korean Problem Academy
   

Korean Problem Academy: a copyrighted collection of 750 problems from the Korean baduk schools designed to train young kids to become dan level players. The problems are divided into 4 sets:

  1. 25 kyu - 15 kyu, 200 problems
  2. 15 kyu - 5 kyu, 200 problems
  3. 5 kyu - 1 kyu, 150 problems
  4. 1 kyu - 4 dan 200 problems.

The problems seems to come in sets that focus on a single concept: createing false eyes, death in the hane, descent to kill, creating big eyes, etc.

The first set of problems (25 kyu - 15 kyu) focus on the concept of a live group via making two eyes and killing groups by creating dead shapes with them.
The focus of the second set (15 kyu - 5 kyu) is ...
The third set (5 kyu - 1 dan) focuses on ...
The fourth set (1 kyu - 4 dan) drill ....

The problems are accessible [ext] online at GoBase (free [ext] registration and login required).

The collection is copyright Pierre Audouard (audouard.pierre@wanadoo.fr), who provided solutions to all 750 problems.

Velobici: Regarding this copyright issue, I have a difficulty understanding what Pierre's copyright covers. Does the copyright cover the problems or just the solutions? The problems were not composed by Pierre. Pierre has added solutions and, perhaps, created the SGF files. It would seem that Pierre's copyright covers the solutions only. By way of analogy, if a person publishes a commentary on a work and copyrights it, the copyright covers the commentary only. The status of the preexisting work is unchanged.

adammarquis: Does anybody think the ranks a bit overestimated? I am around 7-8 kyu and the 3rd set of problems are rather quickly and easily solved.

WilliamNewman: Does anyone know the Korean title of this publication? I was thinking of asking a Korean friend to try to find at least one of the original volumes (in hopes of reading it as I can read Maeda's problems without speaking Japanese). I expect it would be easier to find if we had the Korean title, not just an English paraphrase of the title. (Insert grumpiness here about someone who not only seems to ignore original copyright while asserting his own unqualified copyright -- copyright protection for me but not for thee -- but also doesn't follow the usual academic or net-public-domain-software courtesies of clearly citing the original. Still, I must admit that admitting that there was an original is an important step up from some of the behavior that I've seen.)

TimK: Here is the info from Pierre. I don't know why each one has two ISBNs. Does anyone know where I can buy these?

Volume 1:

Code 1 : 9 788988 847091
Code 2 : 04690
ISBN : 89-88847-09-1
ISBN : 89-88847-08-3

Volume 2:

Code 1 : 9 788988 847107
Code 2 : 04690
ISBN : 89-88847-10-5
ISBN : 89-88847-08-3

Volume 3:

Code 1 : 9 788988 847114
Code 2 : 04690
ISBN : 89-88847-11-3
ISBN : 89-88847-08-3

Volume 4

Code 1 : 9 788988 847121
Code 2 : 04690
ISBN : 89-88847-12-1
ISBN : 89-88847-08-3

Velirun: Hey all - I import Korean baduk books for American players, and I've now had well over a dozen requests for these books. I'd love to find some copies for the masses, but even with these ISBNs I can't seem to find them. If anyone has any more information about these, anything at all, could you please post it here?



This is a copy of the living page "Korean Problem Academy" at Sensei's Library.
(OC) 2004 the Authors, published under the OpenContent License V1.0.