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A sport is a physical activity or skill carried out under a publicly agreed set of rules, and with a recreational purpose: for competition, for self-enjoyment, to attain excellence, for the development of skill, or some combination of these. The difference of purpose is what characterises sport, combined with the notion of individual (or team) skill or prowess.
A game is a recreational activity involving one or more players, defined by a goal that the players try to reach, and some set of rules that determines what the players can do. Games are played primarily for entertainment or enjoyment, but may also serve an educational or simulational role.
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Tic-tac-toe is a pencil-and-paper game for two players, O and X, who take turns marking the spaces in a 3×3 grid. The player who succeeds in placing three respective marks in a horizontal, vertical or diagonal row wins the game.
Players soon discover that best play from both parties leads to a draw. Hence, tic-tac-toe is most often played by very young children; when they have discovered an unbeatable strategy they move on to more sophisticated games such as dots and boxes.
The simplicity of tic-tac-toe makes it ideal as a pedagogical tool for teaching the concepts of combinatorial game theory and the branch of artificial intelligence that deals with the searching of game trees. It is straightforward to write a computer program to play tic-tac-toe perfectly, to enumerate the 765 essentially different positions (the state space complexity), or the 26,830 possible games up to rotations and reflections (the game tree complexity) on this space.
The first known video game, OXO (or Noughts and Crosses, 1952) for the EDSAC computer played perfect games of tic-tac-toe against a human opponent.
One example of a Tic-Tac-Toe playing computer is the Tinkertoy computer, developed by MIT students, and made out of Tinker Toys. It only plays Tic-Tac-Toe, and has never lost a game. It is currently on display at the Museum of Science, Boston.
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Did you know ...
- ... that the first Rose Bowl game (pictured) was played between Fielding Yost's Michigan Wolverines and Stanford?
- ... that the first collectible card game was The Base Ball Card Game produced by The Allegheny Card Co. and registered on April 5, 1904
- ... that the British ice hockey team The Blackburn Hawks are often referred to as the Blackhawks, and were briefly called the Lancashire Hawks?
- ... that Russian President Vladimir Putin said, "Chess makes man wiser and clear-sighted"?
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News
Sports news on Wikipedia- November 17 Pairs skaters Tiffany Vise & Derek Trent are credited with performing the first throw quadruple jump ever performed in international competition. This is the first quadruple ever in pair skating.
Photo credit: Derrick S.of flickr
- September 1 The Appalachian State University Mountaineers defeated the Michigan Wolverines in the 2007 Appalachian State vs. Michigan football game. This upset is the only time a lower division team has ever defeated a ranked Division I-FBS team.
- August 25 - Damon Huard earns his first start as quarterback for the Kansas City Chiefs after playing as a backup for eleven years. (USA Today)
- August 25 - Michael Vick is suspended indefinitely without pay by Roger Goodell after admitting bankrolling Bad Newz Kennels. (AP via Yahoo)
- August 22 -
In the first game of a doubleheader, the Texas Rangers set a modern-era (post-1900)
Major League Baseball single-game record by scoring
30 runs in a 30-3 rout of the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. (AP via Fox
News
- June 12: Euro 2008: Austria vs. Poland
- June 12: Euro 2008: Portugal vs. Czech Republic
- June 9: CTV acquires rights to 'The Hockey Theme'
- June 8: Robert Kubica wins 2008 Canadian Grand Prix
- June 8: Dani Pedrosa wins 2008 Catalan MotoGP
- June 7: Wikinews interviews manager of site 'Lose The Game'
- April 26: Game modified to match New Zealand, police investigate
- April 4: Sony Fair 2008 starts in Taipei, Taiwan with "HD Entertainment Park"
- March 16: Play.com Live multimedia exposition hosted at Wembley Stadium, England
- March 4: Dungeons & Dragons co-creator Gary Gygax dies
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