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- From: shauck@netcom.com (William R. Shauck)
- Subject: rec.games.chess Answers to Frequently Asked Questions [2/2]
- Message-ID: <chess2_762589524@netcom.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Summary: This posting addresses some of the FAQ's on the
- rec.games.chess news group. Topics include E-Mail games, Internet
- Chess Server (ICS), Material available via FTP servers, Dedicated
- Computers, and Software for Playing, Databases and Utilities.
- Keywords: chess FAQ semimonthly answers
- Supersedes: <chess2_760523162@netcom.com>
- Reply-To: shauck@netcom.com
- Organization: NETCOM On-line Communication Services (408 241-9760 guest)
- References: <chess1_762589524@netcom.com>
- Date: Wed, 2 Mar 1994 06:26:02 GMT
- Approved: news-answers-request@mit.edu
- Expires: Wed, 30 Mar 1994 06:25:24 GMT
- Lines: 630
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu rec.games.chess:22922 rec.answers:4332 news.answers:15951
-
- Last-Modified: 1994/03/01
- Archive-Name: games/chess/part2
-
- Publicly available playing, e-mail lists, or material
- [17] E-Mail Games, ICS, Mailing Lists, Gopher, Usenet Reader
- [18] Material Available via Anonymous FTP
- Commercially available playing or material
- [19] Chess-Playing Computers
- [20] Chess-Playing Software
- [21] Database Software
- [22] Utility Software
- Miscellaneous
- [23] Using Graphic Chess Symbols in Printed Text
- [24] Trivia
- [25] Common Acronyms
- [26] Rules
- [27] Variants
- [28] Disclaimer and Copyright Notice
-
- This FAQ list may be obtained via anonymous FTP from rtfm.mit.edu under
- /pub/usenet/news.answers/games/chess/part2. Or, send email to
- mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with 'send usenet/news.answers/games/chess/part2' in
- the body of the message, leaving the subject line empty.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Subject: [17] E-Mail Games, ICS, Mailing Lists, Gopher, Usenet reader
-
- Rob Buchner (rainbow@cbnewsc.cb.att.com) organizes e-mail games on "ladders."
- If you would like to be included on the ladder, simply send him a message.
- Contacting potential opponents and setting up matches is your initiative.
- Just let him know whenever a match starts or ends. Also, after a game has
- been completed, include the following information:
- white score black completed moves opening
- ***** ***** ***** ********* ***** *******
- name ?:? name date number type
- Ladder updates are posted to rec.games.chess about once a month.
-
- The Internet Chess Server (ICS) was originally developed by Michael Moore
- (mmoore@dsd.es.com). ICS allows interactive chess games for those with
- Internet telnet capability. Use telnet (e.g., "telnet ics.uoknor.edu 5000")
- to connect. All may log on and play chess, but if you wish to have your games
- recorded and develop a rating, register on the system you use (see help on the
- system for more information). Send questions to tange@daimi.aau.dk or
- danke@daimi.aau.dk. There are currently two IC Servers running:
- ics.uoknor.edu (129.15.10.21) 5000 (Univ. of Oklahoma, USA)
- bentley.daimi.aau.dk (130.225.16.62) 5000 (Aarhus, Denmark)
- (if 5000 doesn't work, try 5001 or 5002)
- ICS only displays ASCII boards. For graphical interfaces for X, NeXT, MacOS or
- MS-DOS, see [18] (Miscellaneous) for an associated FTP server.
-
- Michael Nolan has set up a mailing list "echo" of the rec.games.chess news
- group. Messages sent to the list will be posted in rec.games.chess, and all
- posts to rec.games.chess will be sent to the mailing list. The address to
- send messages to be posted to rec.games.chess is:
- chessnews@tssi.com (UUCP: tssi!chessnews)
- The mailing list administration address is:
- chessnews-request@tssi.com (UUCP: tssi@chessnews-request)
- Requests to be added to the mailing list should include a clear indication of
- the e-mail address to be used, and will be verified before being accepted.
-
- There is a mailing list which is not associated with rec.games.chess called
- "chess-l." It averages about 4 posts/day, which are sent to subscribers via
- e-mail. To subscribe to the chess-l news group, send the message "subscribe
- chess-l Your-Real-Name-Here" to listserv@grearn.bitnet.
-
- A mailing list for those interested in scholastic chess has been set up by
- Kenneth Sloan (sloan@cis.uab.edu). Send a request to be added to the list to
- scholastic-chess-request@cis.uab.edu.
-
- Gopher is "a document delivery service"; sort of a stripped-down menu-driven
- FTP. Those with access to a gopher client can access kasey.umkc.edu for
- chess-related material.
-
- For those on the Internet whose sites do not receive rec.games.chess, it can
- be read (along with all other Usenet groups) from an experimental bulletin
- board system (EBBS) run by the University of North Carolina. The Internet
- address for EBBS is launchpad.unc.edu (152.2.22.80). A news reader
- (read-only) is available to all users, but posting is limited to those who
- have been verified by land mail. Internet e-mail privileges are also
- available to verified users. All access to this system is free at this time.
-
- There is a Special Interest Group (SIG) on a pool of computers: the Free-Net
- System at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. Try "telnet
- freenet-in-[a,b,c].cwru.edu" (replace "[a,b,c]" with one of a, b or c). Login
- as a visitor and explore the system. Try "go chess" to find local chess
- bulletin boards and an e-mail chess group. Request membership at
- xx011@cleveland.freenet.edu [The Cleveland Chess Sig (FNCF), 4382 Tiedeman
- Rd., Brooklyn, Ohio 44144].
-
- There is a FidoNet conference for chess which offers games by e-mail.
- Contact the moderator of the CHESS conference: Rita Goudreau @ 1:167/133.
- (Internet equivalent: rita.goudreau@f133.n167.z1.fidonet.org).
-
- There's an e-mail chess pairing service run by William Moxley. To get an
- opponent, send your NAME, E-MAIL ADDRESS, and LEVEL-OF-PLAY (Novice,
- Intermediate, or Expert) to chess.info@vpnet.chi.il.us. If you don't hear
- back within a week, you cannot be reached at the e-mail address provided.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: [18] Material Available via Anonymous FTP
-
- FTP is a way of copying files between networked computers. Information on it
- is available via anonymous FTP from rtfm.mit.edu in the file
- /pub/usenet/news.answers/finding-sources. If you do not know how to use
- anonymous FTP or do not have access to it, you can retrieve the file by
- sending an e-mail message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with "send
- usenet/news.answers/finding-sources" as the body of the message. (Send a
- message containing "help" for general information on the server.) Or, see the
- posting titled "How to find sources (READ THIS BEFORE POSTING)" in the news
- groups comp.sources.wanted or news.answers. Information on what the various
- compression extensions mean (like ".Z") and what utilities are available to
- deal with them can be found in the comp.compression FAQ list (see the posting
- in comp.compression or news.answers titled "comp.compression Frequently Asked
- Questions," or get /pub/usenet/news.answers/compression-faq/* from
- rtfm.mit.edu).
-
- Miscellaneous. A general repository for chess-related material is somewhat
- associated with the Internet Chess Server (ICS). Currently, the 'ICS FTP
- host' is chess.uoknor.edu (129.15.10.254). Material is in the pub/chess
- directory. New material may be placed in pub/chess/uploads. Many freeware
- chess programs for different platforms, including graphical ICS (see [17])
- clients, are available (e.g., for MS-DOS, MacOS, AmigaOS, NeXT, and UNIX vt100
- or X Windows interfaces). Scores of various matches and other groups of games
- as well.
-
- Chaos. A chess tournament pairing program (Swiss pairing as well as Round
- Robin), GNU General Public License, runs on the Commodore-Amiga, available
- from AmiNet mirrors (e.g., wuarchive.wustl.edu), under /pub/aminet/game/think.
-
- GNU chess. Gnuchess is a freely available chess-playing software program.
- Gnuchess 4.0 can be FTP'ed from prep.ai.mit.edu, export.lcs.mit.edu, and
- probably other sites. It can be compiled for X Windows (with XBoard, below),
- SunView, curses, IBM PC character set, or ASCII interfaces. Included in the
- package are the utilities gnuan (analysis program), game (PostScript
- printout), postprint (prints hashfile), checkgame (checks a game listing for
- illegal moves), and checkbook (checks the opening book for illegal moves).
- It has been posted to gnu.chess.
-
- LaTex chess macros. Piet Tutelaers' (rcpt@rwc.urc.tue.nl) chess LaTex
- package (version 1.2) may be FTP'ed from sol.cs.ruu.nl (131.211.80.5); please
- restrict access to weekends or evenings. A server can answer e-mail requests
- (put "send HELP" as the message to mail-server@cs.ruu.nl). Get
- TEX/chess12.*. See [23].
-
- Notation. Notation is a chess game score preprocessor written by Henry
- Thomas (hthomas@irisa.fr). It reads chess games, either in full algebraic or
- shortened notation (i.e., Nf1-g3 or f1g3 or Ng3) and is able to output the
- games and/or the board at any move, in ASCII, PostScript, TeX, or nroff. It
- also can generate output for the gnuan and XBoard programs. It is
- multi-lingual for piece identification; understanding French, English,
- German, Spanish, Dutch, Italian, Polish, etc. The program also handles
- variations and symbolized comments. It works fine on UNIX (Sun SPARCstation
- and Sun-3). It uses standard C, and function declarations are done in both
- K&R-C and ANSI-C. It won't be difficult to compile for MS-DOS with MSC.
- Sources have been posted to comp.sources.misc. You can also get them from
- Mr. Thomas by e-mail. They may be FTP'ed from wuarchive.wustl.edu, in
- /usenet/comp.sources.misc/volume28/notation/*.Z (European users use
- garbo.uwasa.fi).
-
- Chess notation tool kit. The Standard Algebraic Notation (SAN) Kit chess
- programming C source tool kit is designed to help chess software efforts by
- providing common routines for move notation I/O, move generation, move
- execution, and various useful position manipulation services. There are
- substantial additions to the previous version which include a standard
- position notation scheme along with some benchmarking tests. A main program
- is included which gives sample calls for the various routines. Simple I/O
- functions are also provided. A clever programmer needs only to add a search
- and an evaluation function to produce a working chessplaying program. A
- programmer who already has the source to a chessplaying program may improve it
- further by including tool kit routines as needed for standardization. The
- author of this package is Steven J. Edwards (sje@world.std.com). The SAN Kit
- may be retrieved from the 'ICS FTP host'.
-
- XBoard. XBoard is an X11/R4-based user interface for GNU Chess or ICS. As an
- interface to GNU Chess, XBoard lets you play a game against the machine, set
- up arbitrary positions, force variations, or watch a game between two
- machines. As an interface to the ICS, XBoard lets you play against other ICS
- users or observe games they are playing. You can also use XBoard as a
- chessboard to review or analyze games. It will read a game file or allow you
- to play through a variation manually. This is useful for keeping track of
- email postal games, browsing games off the net, or reviewing GNU Chess and ICS
- games you have saved. Beginning with version 2.0, Tim Mann <mann@src.dec.com>
- has taken over development of XBoard. The program can be FTP'ed from the 'ICS
- FTP host.'
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: [19] Chess-Playing Computers
-
- There are numerous dedicated chess-playing computers available commercially,
- as well as chess-playing software for various personal computers. Prices
- vary from perhaps $10,000 for the most expensive dedicated computer to
- perhaps $30 for the cheapest software (see [20]). The differences are
- basically how strong the machine (or software) plays, and the other features
- it has to offer (e.g., for dedicated machines: size of board, wood/plastic,
- autosensory or "push the pieces," etc.).
-
- When purchasing a chess computer or software, it is best to buy something
- which plays at least 300 points above your rating. Here are the estimated
- USCF ratings for some of the more popular dedicated chess computers.
-
- The following list of estimated ratings for dedicated chess computers is from
- _Computer Chess Reports_, 1993.
-
- TASC R30 "King" 2558
- Mephisto Lyon 68030 2468
- Mephisto Vancouver 68030 2463
- Mephisto RISC 1MB 2444
- Saitek Kasparov RISC 2500 2439
- Mephisto Portugal 68030 2432
- Fidelity Elite 10 68040 2377
- Mephisto Vancouver 32 bit 2361
- Mephisto Lyon 32 bit 2358
- Fidelity Premiere Vancouver 2342
- Mephisto Berlin 2342
- Fidelity Elite 9 68030 2331
- Mephisto Vancouver 16 bit 2316
- Mephisto Portugal 32 bit 2315
- Mephisto Lyon 16 bit 2314
- Mephisto Almeria 32 bit 2293
- Saitek Galileo BruteForce 2284
- Fidelity Mach IV/Designer 2325 2276
- Mephisto Portugal 16 bit 2252
- Fidelity Elite v5 dual 2234
- Mephisto Polgar 10 2234
- Mephisto Roma 32 bit 2220
- Mephisto Dallas 32 bit 2217
- Mephisto Almeria 16 bit 2214
- Novag Diablo/Scorpio 2201
- Fidelity Mach III/Elite 2 2189
- Novag SuperExpert/Forte C 2184
- Mephisto Mondial 68000 2175
- Mephisto Polgar 2170
- Mephisto MM5 2160
- Mephisto Roma 16 bit 2153
- Mephisto Milano 2152
- Mephisto Dallas 16 bit 2152
- Novag SuperExpert/Forte B 2138
- Mephisto Academy 2137
- Fidelity Mach II L.A. 2124
- Mephisto Amsterdam 2119
- Fidelity Travel Master 2117
- Mephisto MonteCarlo 4 2116
- Saitek GK 2000 2111
- Mephisto Modena 2110
- Saitek Galileo Maes D 2107
- Mephisto MM4 2104
- Mephisto Mega 4 2103
- CXG Sphinx Domin 2096
- Saitek Travel Champion 2093
- Novag SuperExpert/Forte (6 MHz) 2087
- Novag SuperExpert/Forte (5 MHz) 2048
- Fidelity Designer 2100 Display 2048
- Fidelity 68000 xl B 2040
- Saitek Corona2/TurboKing2 2037
- Saitek Statos 2034
- Saitek Corona/Simult 2021
- Excalibur Legend/Accolade 2020
- Fidelity ParEX/Chesster 2014
- Mephisto MM3 2010
- Novag Expert (5 MHz) 2008
- Novag Forte B 2008
- Novag Forte 1999
- Saitek TurboKing 1984
- Fidelity Excel 4 1983
- Novag Expert (4 MHz) 1976
- Saitek TurboKasparov 1958
- Mephisto MM2 1952
- Fidelity Excel/Designer 2000 1952
- Saitek Prisma/Blitz 1951
- RadioShack 2150L 1927
- Novag SuperNova 1918
- Novag SuperConstellation 1917
- Mephisto Blitz 1893
- Novag Super VIP 1889
- USCF Academy/Mephisto Marco Polo/Europa 1864
- Novag Primo/VIP 1835
- Novag Constellation 3.6 1834
- Novag Quattro 1826
- Novag Constellation 1777
- Advanced StarChess 1755
- Fidelity Sensory 9 1699
- Saitek Astral/Conquistador/Cavalier 1678
-
- Ratings are the average of CCR30', CCR10', Computer Chess News Sheet
- and the "Ply" list from Sweden. See the Volume 3, Number 2 issue
- of _Computer Chess Reports_ for more details.
-
- There are a number of non-commercial chess-playing machines, the strongest
- and most famous of which is "Deep Thought." Deep Thought was built and
- programmed by graduate students Feng-Hsiung Hsu, Thomas Anantharaman, Murray
- Campbell, Peter Jansen, Mike Browne, and Andreas Nowatzyk at Carnegie Mellon
- University, and who are now working (some of them, anyway) for IBM. The
- current version of Deep Thought has beaten several GM's and many IM's. It
- has a USCF rating of about 2520. (The Oct. 1990 issue of _Scientific
- American_ goes into more detail on Deep Thought.) Another Carnegie Mellon
- product, "Hitech," was developed by former World Correspondence Champion Dr.
- Hans Berliner and sports a USCF rating just over 2400.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: [20] Chess-Playing Software
-
- The strength of chess-playing software is highly dependent on the hardware it
- runs on (all software discussed is for MS-DOS; programs available for MacOS
- are noted). Here is a method to approximate the strength differences for the
- same software running on different hardware (source: _Computer Chess Reports_).
-
- Processor "Chess MIP's"
-
- 8088 Speed in MHz divided by 19
- 80286, 1 wait state Speed in MHz divided by 8
- 80286, 0 wait states Speed in MHz divided by 6
- 80386, no cache memory Speed in MHz divided by 6
- 80386 with cache Speed in MHz divided by 4.7
- 80486 Speed in MHz divided by 2.3
-
- (Note that math coprocessors--used before the 486--don't change the speed,
- since chess programs don't use floating point arithmetic at all.)
-
- Now, if a program has a given rating on a 1 (Chess) MIP machine, this is how
- to adjust the rating for other MIP's (interpolate between points):
-
- MIP: 0.25 0.5 1 1.5 2 3 4 6 8 12 16 24 32 48 64
- Adj.: -180 -87 0 47 80 124 154 195 223 261 287 323 347 379 402
-
- For example, a program running on a 10 MHz 8088 (0.5 MIP's and -87 points)
- will be about 272 USCF rating points weaker than the same program running on
- a 33 MHz 80386 (no cache: 5.5 MIP's and +185 points).
-
- CCR Ratings List PC Program Ratings
-
- ChessMachine Madrid King 2.0 2558
- ChessMachine Madrid Schroder 3.0 2498
- Chess Genius 2494
- MChess Professional 2460
- ChessMachine Schroder ARM2 2420
- ChessMachine King ARM2 2399
- Socrates 2392
- Fritz 2.0 2360
- Zarkov 3.0 2350
- Psion 2 2318
- Zarkov 2.5 & 2.6 2312
- Grandmaster 2297
- Rexchess 2.3 2283
- Sargon 5 2278
- Alpha 2274
- Fritz 1/Knightstalker 2237
- Chessmaster 3000 2201
- Chess Champion 2175
- Psion 1 2121
- Colossus x 2070
- Chessmaster 2100 2057
- Final Chesscard 1894
-
- Ratings are the average of autotest at 30" to 1' per move, Computer
- Chess News Sheet from England and the "Ply" list from Sweden. PC
- programs are rated on an i486 PC running at 33MHz. See the Volume 3,
- Number 2 issue of _Computer Chess Reports_ for more details.
-
- MChess Pro ~2480 by Marty Hirsch, San Rafael, California
- Runs on a 286 with 640K, but a 386 with 12 Meg is recommended (10 are used for hash tables).
- Opening book is 7x as large as amateur version and is programable.
- Improved graphics. DM 250
- MChess 1.1 - 1.72 2400 by Marty Hirsch
- DM 180
- Zarkov 2.6 2350 by John Stanback / Chess Laboratories
- Interfacing to the chess database software Bookup.
- Supersedes Zarkov 2.5 (USCF 2280) by John Stanback.
- Best analyzation features. DM 135
- ChessChampion 2175 2340 by Chris Whittington
- Program uses Shannon B strategy, not brute force like all the others.
- Supersedes ChessPlayer by Chris Whittington. DM 115
- KnightStalker II ~2300 by Frans Morsch / ChessBase
- Interfacing to the chess database software ChessBase.
- Program can be used as background-evaluator while working
- with ChessBase 4.0. It can read ChessBase libraries. DM 178
- Supersedes KnightStalker I (USCF 2260, DM 99) by ChessBase.
- Grandmaster Chess 2300 by John Stanback / Capstone
- Mass market version of Zarkov 2.55 with pull-down menus and fancier graphics
- (2d and 3d board), but is missing some of Zarkov2.6's features such as
- generating multiple candidate moves when analyzing games, annotations,
- generating PCX or WPG chess diagrams, interfacing to Bookup7 etc. DM 110
- Rexchess 2.30 2290 by Larry Kaufman
- DM 99. Will be superseded by TitanChess by Larry Kaufman,
- which is expected to come out Dec 92.
- - Heuristic Alpha by Larry Kaufman
- Written for 8086er and 80286er in C. Selled to Electronic Arts.
- Expected to come out spring 93.
- - Sokrates by Larry Kaufman
- Written for 80386er and 80486er in Assembler.
- Hasn't found any publisher up to now.
- Psion 2 2290 by Richard Lang / Psion Ltd.
- Supersedes Psion 1 (USCF 2140) by Psion Ltd.
- Program of Mephisto Amsterdam, recompiled for IBM PC.
- CheckCheck by Wolfgang Delmare / Digital Concepts
- German but completely self-explaining (mouse/buttons/icons).
- Full version contains complete database of four-piece-finishings.
- That needs 16 Mb on the hard disk.
- DM 99 without database or DM 168 for full version. VGA only
- Chessmaster 3000 2170 by Software Toolworks
- Excellent graphics. DM 99
- A windows version of Chessmaster 3000 is marketed as well for DM 119.
- A CD ROM version can be bought for DM 145.
- Supersedes Chessmaster 2100 (USCF 2070) by Software Toolworks.
- Sargon V ~2100? by Dan and Kathy Spracklen / Activision
- DM 115. Supersedes Sargon IV by Spinnaker.
- Colossus Chess X 2090
- DM 50
- BattleChess by Interplay
- Very weak program with the most entertaining graphics. DM 50
- A windows version of BattleChess is marketed as well for DM 110.
- Little trap: BattleChess II isn't a chess but a chinese chess program.
-
- Available for MacOS: Chessmaster 3000 & 2100, Sargon IV (V due soon),
- BattleChess and CheckMate. Available for the Amiga: Chessmaster 2000 and
- 2100, Sargon III and IV, Chessplayer 2150 and Chess Champion 2175, BattleChess
- and CheckMate, ChessMate, The Art of Chess, Colossus Chess and the
- ChessMachine.
-
- Gnuchess is a freely available chess-playing software program (see [18]).
- Its strength varies widely based on the machine for which it's compiled.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: [21] Database Software
-
- Chess databases store games and information about games, and can manipulate
- and recall that information in a variety of ways. The "big three" of chess
- databases are NICBase, ChessBase, and Bookup. You can purchase data disks for
- each of these databases. NICBase and ChessBase are game-oriented, while
- Bookup is opening-oriented. Each has its strengths and weaknesses. A good
- (but dated) review of these programs was written by Eric Schiller and appeared
- in the Sept. 1990 _Chess Life_. A more current review was written for the
- APCT, and Jon Edwards has volunteered his e-mail address for information:
- jedwards@phoenix.princeton.edu. Bookup interfaces with Zarkov; ChessBase
- interfaces with KnightStalker/Fritz.
-
- Bookup from Chess Laboratories, P.O. Box 3541, S. Pasadena, CA 91031.
- 818-799-7567. Version 7 for MS-DOS costs $99 and version 1.3 for MacOS costs
- $59.
-
- ChessBase 3.0 (MS-DOS only); basic $295, deluxe $395, upgrade from 2.2 $75.
- ChessBase ACCESS $39.95. ChessBase USA, P.O. Box 133, Hagerstown, MD 21741.
- 301-733-7541 (orders only: 800-524-3527); fax 301-797-6269. USCF prices: 3.0
- $279, ACCESS $37.95. ChessBase 4.0 is out; upgrade from 3.0 is $60-70,
- Depending on manual. $5 demo disk.
-
- NICBase 3.0 (MS-DOS or Atari ST: $195 with 5,000 games; $595 with 50,000
- games) & NICTools ($125) from Chess Combination, Inc. P.O. Box 2423 Noble
- Station, Bridgeport CT 06608-0423. Phone 203-367-1555 or 800-354-4083; fax
- 203-380-1703; e-mail 70244.1532@compuserve.com (Albert Henderson). Free
- catalog and sample of _New in Chess_. NICBase 3 demo disk free to users of
- CompuServe and the Internet. NICBase 3 was reviewed in _Chess Horizons_
- Jul/Aug 1992, Canadian _En Passant_ Apr 1992, _California Chess Journal_
- Feb/Mar 1992, and USAT _Chess Perspectives_ Nov 1991.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: [22] Utility Software
-
- Eric Churchill's Chess Recorder, a (PC) Windows program that records chess
- moves, suitable for keeping track of postal games, will be uploaded to GEnie
- and submitted to comp.binaries.ibm.pc. (It even keeps a log of when the
- moves were entered, which could be used to keep track of postal time limits.)
- You can enter annotations and other comments and they appear in a separate
- window when the corresponding move is displayed. The program will print out
- the moves of the game (with annotations). $15 shareware fee. Graphics are
- quite good--looks OK even on monochrome systems. The colors of the pieces on
- color systems are 'interesting.' It can now flip colors to put Black on
- bottom.
-
- Swis-Sys, a $70 Swiss System pairing program, is available from Thad Suits
- (the author), 2125 1st Ave North, Great Falls, MT, 59401. 406-453-6160.
-
- Chaos, another pairing program (Swiss pairing as well as Round Robin), GNU
- General Public License, runs on the Commodore-Amiga, available from Aminet
- mirrors (wuarchive.wustl.edu for example), directory /pub/aminet/game/think.
-
- Thanks, Jochen
-
- & Jochen Wiedmann
- For other software utilities see [18].
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: [23] Using Graphic Chess Symbols in Printed Text
-
- There are basically three ways of composing chess texts in international
- figurine notation (or including diagrams in printed text):
-
- 1) Use a word processor or page-layout program and a chess font. For
- instance, for the Apple Macintosh there are at least 3 different sets of
- fonts usable with standard word processors like Microsoft Word, MacWrite,
- Nisus or WriteNow; or with page-layout programs like Illustrator or
- PageMaker. Most of these fonts are proprietary (you must purchase them).
- The fonts usually can be used for both the figurines and the diagrams. A
- freely available/usable PostScript font, including a variety of figurines,
- diagrams and _Informant_ symbols, has been posted to comp.fonts and
- rec.games.chess by Andy Walker (anw@maths.nott.ac.uk).
-
- 2) Use a chess-specific writing application. ChessWriter (Apple Macintosh)
- offers an interface including a chessboard and a text window. Moves made on
- the chessboard are automatically transformed into characters in the text
- window. ChessWriter is proprietary.
- CC-Publisher (MS Windows) is another commercial chess-specific writing
- application. You must have MS Windows, a word processing package (Word,
- WordPerfect, AmiPro), and a chess database system (for generating
- diagrams--although this could be done by hand--like ChessBase or Zarkov). It
- comes in two versions. The basic version supports HP LJ-compatible laserjet
- printers ($49.95). The deluxe version supports any PostScript printer, and
- comes with PostScript Type I or TrueType fonts ($139.95). You get integrated
- utilities to move you from game-entry or diagram-creation to conversion and
- import into your word processor, with special Tips and Tricks for MS Word,
- Lotus AmiPro, and WordPerfect users. Extremely easy installation, and your
- fonts become available to all Windows applications. There's a comprehensive
- user manual on the installation disk, and you get free technical support!
- (_Chess Chow_ subscribers get disconts: basic--$10, deluxe--$20.) To order,
- see address for _Chess Chow_ in [15].
-
- 3) Use the LaTeX chess macros and fonts package by Piet Tutelaers (see [18]).
- TeX is an advanced public-domain system for text formatting available on
- mainframes, workstations and personal computers. LaTeX is a set of
- text-formatting macros for TeX. METAFONT is a font generator program for
- TeX. For general information on all of these, and pointers to reference
- manuals, see the FAQ list posting in comp.text.tex.) Once you have the chess
- package, you'll need to 3a) be able to use METAFONT to generate chess fonts
- starting from the programs contained in the package; 3b) be able to install
- the LaTeX macros in your TeX system; and 3c) learn the macro language to
- format chess texts. Activity 3a can become tiresome if you do not have any
- help from a TeX wizard. Using LaTeX to write chess text is not very simple,
- but the results are worth the effort.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: [24] Trivia
-
- How long is the longest possible chess game?
-
- The basic idea is a player may claim a draw if fifty moves elapse without a
- capture or a pawn advance. Ignoring the special cases where more than 50
- moves are allowed by the rules, the answer is after Black's 5948th move,
- White is able to claim a draw. The simple calculation is (<Pawn_moves> +
- <Captures> - <Duplicates> + <Drawing_interval_grace_period>) *
- <Drawing_interval>, or (16*6 + 30 - 8 + 1) * 50 = 5950; we're able to trim
- two moves from this total by observing that sequences of Captures/Pawn_moves
- must have (at least) 4 alternations between the two players.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: [25] Common Acronyms
-
- AI Artificial Intelligence ("Anything we can't do with a computer")
- BCE _Basic Chess Endings_ (see your local chess book source)
- BCF British Chess Federation
- BCO _Batsford Chess Openings_ (see [14])
- DT Deep Thought (see [19])
- DT II Deep Thought; latest version
- ECO _Encylopedia of Chess Openings_ (see your local chess book source)
- ELO Arpad Elo's rating system (see [8])
- FAQ Frequently Asked Question (see news group news.answers)
- FIDE Federation Internationale des Echecs (see [1])
- FM FIDE Master (see [1])
- F-S II Fischer-Spassky match held Sept-Nov '92 (Fischer won 10-5)
- GM Grandmaster (see [1])
- ICS Internet Chess Server (see [18])
- IGM see GM
- IM International Master (see [1])
- IWM International Woman Master (see [1])
- KIA King's Indian Attack (see opening books)
- KID King's Indian Defense (see opening books)
- MCO _Modern Chess Openings_ (see [14])
- N Novelty (see TN)
- NM National Master (or just "Master"; see [8])
- OTB Over-the-board (as opposed to correspondence/postal chess)
- QGA Queen's Gambit Accepted (see opening books)
- QGD Queen's Gambit Declined (see opening books)
- SM Senior Master (see [8])
- TD Tournament Director
- TN Theoretical Novelty
- A new idea in an opening line (usually used when a GM first tries it)
- USCF United States Chess Federation (see [2])
- WGM International Woman Grandmaster (see [1])
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: [26] Rules
-
- Steve Rix (steven@chemeng.ed.ac.uk) has volunteered to supply either a plain
- text or TeX version of the FIDE Laws of Chess to any who ask via e-mail. He
- also periodically posts the plain text version to rec.games.chess.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: [27] Variants
-
- Over the centuries, many variations of chess have appeared and more have been
- invented recently by gaming enthusiasts. Charles E. Tuttle Co., Inc. (28
- South Main Street, Rutland, VT 05701) has published a general book on the
- subject: _Chess Variations: Ancient, Regional, and Modern_ by John Gollon.
- Two of the most popular alternatives to our version of chess are known as
- Chinese Chess (or shiang-chi or xiangqi) and Shogi (or Japanese Chess). Ishi
- Press International (76 Bonaventura Drive, San Jose, CA 95134) sells good
- books on both of these games. (_Chinese Chess for Beginners_ by Sam Sloan
- and _Shogi for Beginners_ by John Fairbairn. Warning: Sam Sloan's eccentric
- views about chess history are far from universally accepted.) One relatively
- recent variation of chess is called Ultima and is described in detail in the
- book _Abbott's New Card Games_ by Robert Abbott.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: [28] Disclaimer and Copyright Notice
-
- Some answers given may reflect personal biases of the author and the chess FAQ
- listing's contributors. In cases where the answers name specific products and
- their respective manufacturers, these are not to be taken as endorsements of,
- nor commercials for, the manufacturer. Where cost information is stated this
- is based on "street" information, and is in no way binding on the seller.
- Unless otherwise stated, prices, addresses, and telephone numbers are in
- United States' terms. The answers contained herein pertain to discussions on
- the rec.games.chess news group, and are by no means exhaustive.
-
- The chess FAQ list owes its existence to the contributors on the net, and as
- such it belongs to the readers of rec.games.chess. Copies may be made freely,
- as long as they are distributed at no charge, and the disclaimer and the
- copyright notice are included.
- --
- William R. Shauck Internet: shauck@netcom.com
-