tundra wrote:RobertJasiek wrote:HKA wrote:John Fairbairn is responsible, directly or indirectly, for over half of the information available to non Asian language speakers about Go.
Do you mean "history information about Asian players, associations, games" instead of "information" in general? If so, over 50% seems still a bit of an exaggeration. (Although roughly, say, one fourth is still impressive.)
Without meaning to minimize John Fairbairn's worthy contributions, I am also puzzled by HKA's claim.
I would say this title belongs jointly to such people as Richard Bozulich (especially him), John Power, and James Davies of Ishi/Kiseido, Dr. Sidney Yuan of Yutopian, and other translators such as Robert J. Terry. (And I'm probably overlooking many others.) Some have been bringing go to the west for over 40 years. The level of go played in the west (or at least, in the English-speaking part) would be much lower without their efforts.
These are fair comments. I was meaning historical and cultural info as opposed to technique. Hard to measure, not sure how much I am overstating, but I suspect not alot - certainly between Jasiek's 1/4 and my over half.