johnallen
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Help for the Visually Impaired
johnallen replied to John in the Sun's topic in Suggestions for the Software
My wife has vision issues and sometimes mixes up hearts and diamonds when they are adjacent. It would be quite helpful if the suits were four different colours (purple hearts, green clubs) as on some sites. Perhaps this could be a user option. Thank you. Allen Woolfrey -
My wife has vision issues, and often mixes up hearts and diamonds. Allowing different colors for each suit would help her (and others) immensely. Please make this option a priority. Allen Woolfrey
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Please help me understand standard practice for this common situation. I have not found a good written description of this. I open 1-minor, and partner raises to 3-minor. He has about 11 points, 5+ support, and no four card major. Now what? 1. If I have a minimum minimum, I think I should pass. 2. If some of his points are dummy points, he may have 9 HCP, so 3NT may be a bad idea unless I have a medium hand. Do I ignore this possibility? 3. If I have a good minimum or a medium hand, I want to try for 3NT. If I have the other suits stopped, I can bid 3NT directly. If a suit is open (e.g., a worthless doubleton), I think I should bid stoppers and see if partner can bid 3NT. Example: My 1 club opening is raised to 3 clubs. I have a worthless doubleton in diamonds. I bid 3 hearts to show a stopper and deny a diamond stopper. If partner has a diamond stopper, what does he do? Question: What is the general approach for deciding when to try for 3NT, and how does a partnership bid and ask for stoppers? Regards, Allen Woolfrey
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CTL-W works ! Thank you for your help.
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Thank you everyone. BBO under Wine works reasonably well under Ubuntu 7.10 following these steps to install: 0. Install Wine using the Synaptic Package Manager. 1. Do "wine bbo_setup.exe" 2. Copy Symbol font "symbol.ttf" to ~/.wine/drive_c/windows/fonts Then: 1. The launcher on the desktop should work. If not, run "wine NetBridgeVu.exe". 2. When BBO starts, you are told that the Gecko installer should be run. After it is run, BBO works as far as I've tested it. However, the "Back" button is off the screen, so the only way to leave a table is to get out of BBO. Does anyone know how to see the back button and other controls at the bottom of the BBO window?
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There used to be a thread on this that disappeared recently. I am running Ubuntu 7.10, and BBO seems to install (using Wine) but fails when I try to run it. Does anyone have it working (other than on the Eee)?
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1h-p-2nt, what do SAYC partners actually mean?
johnallen replied to MomoTheDog's topic in Natural Bidding Discussion
Thank you. Are there any other common bids to clarify in SAYC? -
1h-p-2nt, what do SAYC partners actually mean?
johnallen replied to MomoTheDog's topic in Natural Bidding Discussion
Maybe this sounds pedantic, but the ACBL summary of SAYC (January 2006) says 1M-2N is Jacoby, so it's Jacoby. SAYC is well-defined, which is its strength. Let's play it as defined, and educate those who play it incorrectly. Maybe there should be a category like "Strict SAYC". Does this sound too idealistic? -
My thoughts: Assuming K♣ on side, we hope clubs are 3-3. If Kxxx-xx, we lose the King anyway. If Kx-8xxx, we lose to the 8 if west covers the J♣ lead and we make the mistake of cashing clubs in dummy (throwing away the 9♣ winner). If west covers J♣, we win with the A and lead low to our 9♣ winner, then get back to dummy with a carefully preserved trump entry to cash the rest of the clubs. If west doesn't cover the J, then repeat the finesse with the 9 and overtake with the 10. Cash the A, and the K better fall or we were never going to run the clubs. If the K doesn't fall, lead a small diamond, and hope the A is with east and he takes it. We can then use the KQ to pitch spades in dummy and establish the J or 10. There is more to think through. Good problem. Other thoughts?
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Which card to play?
johnallen replied to twcho's topic in Intermediate and Advanced Bridge Discussion
Eddie Kantar's "Modern Bridge Defense" treats this topic fully. However, his "Bridge for Dummies (2nd. Ed)" provides simpler rules that I suggest are more appropriate for Beginner/Intermediate. He states (for second hand play): "... if you have a sequence of three or more equal cards headed by an honor, such as Q.J.10.4 or J.10.9.8...play your highest equal, the same card you would have led had you been on lead." I suggest the phrase "equal cards headed by an honor" answers the question about J.10.9. -
Which card to play?
johnallen replied to twcho's topic in Intermediate and Advanced Bridge Discussion
To return to the original question: Is the consensus that (since) '9' is not an honor, it therefore is not part of the consideration of what card to play? For example, would those who play highest of 3 or more touching honors and the lower of touching honors play '10' from 'J.10.9'? What about '10.9.8'? -
I heard an interview with Eddie Kantar (from BridgeHands.com). He explained that he wasn't satisfied with the first edition of "Bridge for Dummies", but had more control over the second edition and was happy with it. The diagrams look fine to me. I quite like this book. It teaches defensive bidding effectively as well. I think if it wasn't a "... for Dummies" book it would get more respect.
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My recommendation for the best beginner's book is "Bridge for Dummies", Second Edition, by Eddie Kantar. Kantar is a world-class writer (and player), and this is a well-written, simple-to-understand book that provides full coverage of standard bidding and play. This book teaches Jacoby Tansfers and Negative Doubles as part of today's standard bidding, which I am glad to see. Audrey Grant's books are good, but you need the whole series to get the overall picture. The SAYC book is terrific, but is more for people who have learned the game enough to want to learn the discipline of SAYC. Much as I think 2/1 is the future, I personally think it's not in common use by the mainstream player. Graduate to Max Hardy's book on 2/1 "Standard Bridge Bidding for the 21st Century" when you are ready to read about 2/1. Hope this helps.
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If we make the rule that opener cannot rebid beyond 2 of his opening bid without extra values (14+), then: 1. With GF values and 4225, responder can bid 2♣ over 1♥ then 2♠ over a 2♥ rebid by opener (showing a minimum). This reverse by responder empowers opener to raise to 3♠ with 4 card support, and responder can place the contract. (Opener must bid until game is reached after the responder reverse.) 2. Without GF values and 4225, responder bids 1♠ over 1♥ and hopes to mention his clubs if that seems relevant. Thoughts?
