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- Newsgroups: rec.games.chess.misc,rec.answers,news.answers
- Subject: rec.games.chess.misc FAQ [3/4]
- Followup-To: poster
- Approved: news-answers-request@mit.edu
- Reply-To: pribut@yahoo.com
- Summary: rgcm FAQ. Email-Chess, Live Net Chess, Computer Software
- Last-Modified: 2002/12/16
- Originator: faqserv@penguin-lust.MIT.EDU
- Date: 04 May 2004 12:59:20 GMT
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- Archive-Name: games/chess/part3
-
- Chess FAQ
-
- rec.games.chess.misc FAQ part 3/4
-
-
-
- Please obtain all URLs from the current hypertext version of the faq
-
- available From: http://www.drpribut.com/sports/chess.html
-
-
-
- Publicly available material
-
- [18] Material Available via Anonymous FTP
-
- [19] Chess-Playing Computers
-
- [20] Chess-Playing Software
-
- [21] Database Software
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
- [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
-
- "ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/news.answers/finding-sources" 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 from
-
- "ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/compression-faq"
-
- rtfm.mit.edu in the file /pub/usenet/news.answers/compression-faq.
-
-
-
- Miscellaneous. A general repository for chess-related material is
-
- somewhat associated with the Internet Chess Server (ICS). Currently, the
-
- 'ICS FTP host' is "ftp://ics.onenet.net/pub/chess" ics.onenet.net or via
-
- the web: "http://caissa.onenet.net/chess/" Caissa.onenet.net 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.
-
-
-
- While directories may change the following should give you an idea of
-
- the probable directory structure and files available. An outline of some
-
- of the recently available directories on ICS follows:
-
-
-
- pub/chess: general chess directory
-
- pub/chess/PGN: Portable Game Notation directory
-
- pub/chess/PGN/Standard: ASCII version of the PGN Standard
-
- pub/chess/PGN/Standard.TOC: Table of Contents for above
-
- pub/chess/PGN/Events: directory of directories of events by year
-
- pub/chess/PGN/Players: directory with many PGN games by player
-
- pub/chess/Tests: directory with many chess program test positions
-
- pub/chess/Tests/Manifest: description of EPD test files
-
- pub/chess/TB: endgame tablebases
-
- pub/chess/TB/README-TB: tablebase decyphering documentation
-
- pub/chess/TB/tbt.c: ANSI C tablebase test harness
-
- pub/chess/PGN/Tools: PGN tools and utilities directory
-
- pub/chess/Unix/SAN.tar.gz: Standard Algebraic Notation source kit
-
-
-
- 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 can be FTP'ed from:
-
-
-
- * "ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu" prep.ai.mit.edu
-
- * "ftp://export.lcs.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.
-
-
-
- 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.'
-
-
-
-
-
- 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
-
- ("mailto:mail-server@cs.ruu.nl"mail-server@cs.ruu.nl ). Get
-
- TEX/chess12.*. See [23].
-
-
-
- Notation. Notation is a chess game score preprocessor written by Henry
-
- Thomas("mailto:hthomas@irisa.fr"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
-
- ("ftp://wuarchive.wustl.edu/usenet/comp.sources.misc/volume28/notation/*
- .Z " wuarchive.wustl.edu )
-
- (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 ("mailto:sje@mv.mv.com"sje@mv.mv.com ).
-
-
-
- The SAN Kit may be retrieved from the
-
- "ftp://ics.onenet.net/pub/chess/Unix/SAN.tar.gz" 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.
-
-
-
-
-
- A computer may assist in your learning in many ways. One of the best
-
- uses is to auto-analyze your own games. Find out where you have erred
-
- and what better lines were available. You may also set up positions that
-
- are of interest or play out lines against the computer. If you are
-
- working on a specific opening, you may play a vairiety of continuations
-
- against the computer. Both middle game and endgame practice are also
-
- useful. Set up positions that are in the instructional books you are
-
- reading. Playing against the computer is excellent practise. Most people
-
- recommend setting up a board, rather than just keeping the position on
-
- screen. Unless of course you are cramming for the ICS.
-
-
-
- The level of play now attainable on your personal computer has reached
-
- that of being able to win against master level and above players. Even
-
- world champion super-GM Garry Kasparov has lost to more than one chess
-
- software program which would be available to anyone. (Fritz and Genius
-
- in speed play) Recently on ICC a GM lost 4 to 5 five minute blitz games
-
- in a row to Chess Genius playing on a Pentium. He tried to win using
-
- tactics rather than postional strategy. These were casual games, to be
-
- sure, but, none the less, computer chess has come a long way since David
-
- Levy, in 1968, made a bet that a computer could not, within 10 years win
-
- a match against him. In 1975, David Levy was able to undertake, and come
-
- out well ahead, in a simultaneous exhibition against 12 chess computers.
-
- I don't think any GM would enjoy doing that now.
-
-
-
- In several books David Levy and Raymond Keene detail their strategy to
-
- win against computer opponents. They suggest avoiding tactics,
-
- concentrating instead on postiional advantages and using long term
-
- strategy to slowly build an advantage. Some of their suggestions
-
- include: allowing your computer opponent to castle first, then castle on
-
- the opposite wing and launch a pawn storm. Software programs typically
-
- use a wide band width brute force search, combined with an in depth
-
- search for tactically active lines.
-
-
-
- Sources of information on computer chess may be found in: _The Computer
-
- Chess Gazette_, Box 2841, Laguna Hills, CA 92654. 714-770-8532. Focuses
-
- on computer chess. _Chess Skill in Man and Machine; Editor Peter Frey.
-
- Springer-Verlag. 1983. _How to Beat your Chess Computer_. Ray Keene and
-
- David Levy. Batsford Chess Library. 1991. Estimated Ratings Of Dedicated
-
- Chess Computers
-
-
-
-
-
- There are a number of non-commercial chess-playing machines, the
-
- strongest and most famous of which is "Deep Blue." It's predecessor 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. Deep Blue beat Kasparov in the second of
-
- their 2 matches. It calculates approximately 200 million moves per
-
- second.
-
-
-
- Chess computers usually evaluate four types of chess values when
-
- choosing their next move: material, position, Kingsafety and tempo.
-
-
-
- The usual rules for material apply: a pawn is considered to be worth a
-
- value of 1, knights and bishops are each valued at 3, a rook value is 5,
-
- and the most valuable piece the Queen counts for 9. The King is far
-
- beyond value, and cannot be lost during the game. His impending capture
-
- via checkmate signifies a loss and is the end of the game.
-
-
-
- Position is more complex. In pre-Nimzovitch time, it was thought that
-
- control of the center was all that mattered. Most grandmaster games
-
- before the 20th century began by moveing the Kings or Queens pawn to the
-
- fourth rank. In this century "hypermodern" openings have been used which
-
- delay the development of the center. The hope is that the opponent will
-
- overextend himself.
-
-
-
- Position in one sense signifies the number of squares controlled,
-
- particularly on the opponents half of the board.
-
-
-
- The defensive aspect of position is the safety of the King. You don't
-
- want your king to fall victim to a simple attack.
-
-
-
- Tempo is related to who gets to place is pieces well first.
-
-
-
-
-
- Subject: [20] Chess-Playing Software
-
-
-
- Since the question most often posed is "how strong is the software", we
-
- will start with a quick look at the rankings.
-
-
-
- SSDF Rating List
- http://w1.859.telia.com/%7Eu85924109/ssdf/list.htm
-
-
- October 2002
-
-
- 1 Deep Fritz 7.0 256MB Athlon 1200 MHz 2755 31 -29 614 71% 2603
- 2 Fritz 7.0 256MB Athlon 1200 MHz 2741 30 -29 574 64% 2636
- 3 Shredder 6.0 Paderb 256MB Athlon 1200 2734 25 -24 852 65% 2624
- 4 Chess Tiger 15.0 256MB Athlon 1200 MHz 2731 33 -31 517 67% 2609
- 5 Shredder 6.0 256MB Athlon 1200 MHz 2717 32 -31 505 64% 2618
- 6 Chess Tiger 14.0 CB 256MB Athlon 1200 2715 30 -30 557 61% 2636
- 7 Deep Fritz 256MB Athlon 1200 MHz 2711 31 -30 531 62% 2628
- 7 Gambit Tiger 2.0 256MB Athlon 1200 2711 29 -29 583 58% 2652
- 9 Junior 7.0 256MB Athlon 1200 MHz 2687 28 -28 623 57% 2637
- 10 Hiarcs 8.0 256MB Athlon 1200 MHz 2680 26 -26 738 55% 2642
- 11 Chess Tiger 15.0 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2679 50 -48 210 60% 2607
- 12 Rebel Century 4.0 256MB Athlon 1200 MHz 2675 29 -29 590 60% 2604
- 13 Shredder 5.32 256MB Athlon 1200 MHz 2662 27 -27 659 53% 2642
- 14 Gandalf 4.32h 256MB Athlon 1200 MHz 2651 34 -33 430 54% 2623
- 15 Deep Fritz 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2648 22 -22 1031 59% 2582
- 16 Deep Fritz 7.0 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2645 52 -51 184 54% 2616
- 17 Gambit Tiger 2.0 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2641 29 -28 634 66% 2526
- 18 Gandalf 5.0 256MB Athlon 1200 MHz 2640 49 -50 202 46% 2671
- 19 Gandalf 5.1 256MB Athlon 1200 MHz 2637 25 -25 758 55% 2603
- 20 Junior 7.0 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2633 24 -23 925 62% 2546
- 21 Fritz 7.0 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2631 38 -37 348 53% 2608
- 22 Chess Tiger 14.0 CB 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2629 26 -25 753 59% 2565
- 23 Gromit 3.11.9 256MB Athlon 1200 MHz 2622 57 -59 148 45% 2661
- 24 Fritz 6.0 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2620 21 -21 1154 60% 2550
- 25 Shredder 6.0 UCI 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2617 43 -43 264 52% 2607
- 26 Crafty 18.12/CB 256MB Athlon 1200 MHz 2612 27 -27 647 52% 2601
- 27 Shredder 5.32 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2606 28 -27 639 58% 2549
- 28 Junior 6.0 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2590 18 -17 1605 56% 2549
- 29 Hiarcs 8.0 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2587 37 -38 344 44% 2626
- 29 Shredder 5.0 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2587 20 -20 1217 55% 2551
- 31 Rebel Century 4.0 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2566 52 -53 178 46% 2592
- 32 Nimzo 8.0 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2554 22 -22 1011 49% 2559
- 33 Nimzo 7.32 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2552 21 -21 1130 53% 2531
- 34 Gandalf 5.0 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2535 73 -68 102 60% 2461
- 35 Gandalf 4.32f 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2532 28 -28 627 51% 2525
- 36 Hiarcs 7.32 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2529 20 -20 1260 45% 2564
- 37 Gandalf 4.32h 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2521 34 -34 418 52% 2506
- 38 SOS 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2518 18 -18 1514 44% 2562
- 38 Rebel Century 3.0 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2518 30 -30 546 49% 2523
- 40 Chessmaster 8000 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2515 44 -45 251 45% 2548
- 41 Goliath Light 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2510 22 -23 992 39% 2588
- 42 Crafty 17.07/CB 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2490 23 -23 912 47% 2514
- 43 MChess Pro 8.0 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2478 25 -26 753 40% 2549
- 44 Crafty 18.12/CB 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2476 32 -34 471 36% 2578
- 45 Genius 6.5 128MB K6-2 450 MHz 2474 29 -29 565 48% 2488
- 46 R30 v. 2.5 2274 41 -38 343 69% 2135
- 47 Meph Genius 68 030 33 MHz 2195 43 -42 267 55% 2157
- 48 Chess Tiger 14.9 Palm m515 16MB 42MHz 2101 69 -74 100 39% 2180
- 49 Atlanta SH7000 20 MHz 2089 29 -28 647 69% 1948
- 50 Sapphire II 2009 34 -32 464 63% 1919
-
-
-
- Some Old, Some New, Nothing At All That Is Blue
-
-
-
-
-
- * Rebel 10 http://www.rebel.nl/
-
- * Rebel Decade 3 ~2200 Free on the net at: http://www.rebel.nl/
-
- * Fritz, Junior, Nimzo, Shredder, et. al. http://www.chessbase.com/
-
-
-
- Freeware and Shareware Available Online:
-
-
-
- Ant http://www.cent.co.yu/chess/free.htm
-
- Arasan http://www.pitt.edu/~schach/Archives/index2.html
-
- Bionic http://www.impakt.be/bion ic/download/
-
- Bowili http://www.gambitsoft.com/sharee.htm
-
- Bug Chess http://www.gambitsoft.com/sharee.htm
-
- Chenard http://www.intersrv.com/~dcross/chenard.html
-
- Cilian http://www.cent.co.yu/chess/free.htm
-
- Clueless http://www.pitt.edu/~schach/Archives/index2.html
-
- Comet http://www.gambitsoft.com/sharee
-
- Crafty ftp://ftp.cis.uab.edu/pub/hyatt/
-
- The Crazy Bishop http://www- leibniz.imag.fr/~coulom/remi.htm
-
- Dabbaba http://www.gambitsoft.com/sharee.htm
-
- La Dame Blanche http://members.xoom. com/mphuget/ladame.htm
-
- Diogenes ftp://gambitsoft.com/pub/shareware/diogenes
-
- Eugen http://www.gambitsoft.com/sharee.htm
-
- EXCHESS http://www.gambitsoft.com/sharee.htm
-
- Faile http://www.cent.co.yu/chess/free.htm
-
- Fortress http://www.cent.co.yu/chess/free.htm
-
- KnightCap http://www.gambitsoft.com/sharee.htm
-
- Gnu Chess ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu/gnuchessPC-4.14.zip
-
- Gromit http://home.t-online.de/home/hobblefrank
-
- Huuhkaja http://www.gambitsoft.com/ sharee.htm
-
- InmiChess http://members.magnet.at/werner.inmann/
-
- Lambchop http://www.cent.co.yu/chess/
-
- Owl Chess http://info.pitt.edu/~schach/Archives/index2.html
-
- Phalanx Unix, Windows binary, Winboard, xboard, RoboFICS compatible.
-
- Y Chess http://stud1.tu wien.ac.at/~e8925162/ychess.html
-
- Siberian Chess http://www.gambitsoft.com/sharee.htm
-
- SSE Chess II http://www.cs.purdue.edu/homes/slutzksn/chess.html
-
- Green Light Chess http://www2.prestel.co.uk/diamond/personal.html
-
- SSEChess http://www.cs.purdue.edu/homes/slutzksn/chess.html
-
- Nero http://www.math.j yu.fi/~huikari/download.html
-
- MS Chess http://www.microsof t.com/games/download.htm
-
- Olipow http://www.phy.uni-bayreuth.de/~btp434/
-
- Olithink http://www.phy.uni-bayreuth.de/~btp434/
-
- Rabbit http://www.cent.co.yu/chess
-
- Rebel Decade 3.0 The Best http://www.rebel.nl/
-
- Rival http://www.gambitsoft.com/sharee.htm
-
- Rookie http://www.cent.co.yu/chess/free.htm
-
- Mirage http://www.gambitsoft.com/sharee.htm
-
- Light Tiger http://www.gambitsoft.com/ sharee.htm
-
- Yace http://home1.stofanet.dk/moq/
-
- Z Chess http://www.worldnet.net/~fzibi/zchess.htm
-
-
-
- Mac:
-
- R Chess - MAC http://hyperarchive.lcs.mit.edu/HyperArchive.html
-
- Chess ++ - MAC http://hypera rchive.lcs.mit.edu/HyperArchive.html
-
- GNU Mac version ftp://caissa.onenet.net/pub/chess/Macintosh/
-
-
-
- LINUX/UNIX:
-
-
- Crafty with Xboard ftp://ftp.cis.uab.edu:/pub/hyatt
-
- Phalanx with Xboard ftp://ftp.math.muni.cz/pub/math/people/Dobes/
-
- KnightCap ftp://samba.anu.edu.au/pub/KnightCap/
-
- GnuChess ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu/
-
- ZZZZZZ - Unix ftp://caissa.onenet.net/pub/chess/Unix/
-
- Olithink - http://www.phy.uni-bayreuth.de/~btp434/
-
- Gromit - http://home.t-online.de/home/hobblefrank
-
- SSEchess: http://www.cs.purdue.edu/homes/slutzksn/chess.html
-
- EXchess: http://www.astro.brandeis.edu/BRAG/people/dch/chess.html
-
- ZZZZZZ - Unix ftp://caissa.onenet.net/pub/chess/Unix/zzzzzz- 3.4.tar.gz
-
-
-
- Pocket Chess
-
-
- Pocket Chess for Windows CE http://www.eskimo.com/~scottlu/
-
- PocketGrandmaster For Pocket PC
- http://www.pocketgrandmaster.com/english/
-
- Chess Genius http://www.chessgenius.com/
-
- Pocket Fritz http://www.chessmaster.com/
-
- Palm OS
-
- Chess Tiger (Palm) http://www.chesstiger.com/
-
- Chess Genius http://www.chessgenius.com/
-
- Chessmaster For Palm
- http://www.gameloft.com/en/product_page.php?item=121
-
-
-
- WinBoard (Viewer/Adjunct to Chess Engines)
-
-
- Many of the freeware/shareware programs operate within the
-
- Winboard/Xboard environment. This is a truely fun and useful tool to use
-
- for those with at least mild geeky tendencies. A wealth of information,
-
- documentation, and even source code for some of the programs is
-
- available.
-
-
-
- Winboard performs three major functions: 1) PGN reader, 2) Interface to
-
- chess engines, 3) Interface to online Chess Sites such as FICS and ICC.
-
-
-
- Winboard may be downloaded at Tim Mann's chess pages:
-
- http://www.tim-mann.org/chess.html . You will also find a listing of 100
-
- chess engines that work with xboard/winboard at:
-
- http://www.tim-mann.org/engines.html
-
-
-
- Details on Winboard/XBoard are on the Winboard/XBoard FAQ at:
-
- http://www.tim-mann.org/xboard/FAQ.html#[A0] and additional information
-
- at: http://www.chesskit.com/aarontay/Winboard/Winboard.html .
-
-
-
- The "Winboard Engine Newsticker" has the latest news on engines that run
-
- with winboard online at:
-
- http://www.winboardengines.de/html/winboard-newsticker.htm
-
- and.
-
-
-
-
-
- Winboard compatible engines may run within Chessbase and Fritz 5.32 and
-
- up using an adaptor found at:
-
- http://www.chessbase.com/Products/engines/winboard/adapter.htm
-
-
-
- WB Tourney Manager will allow you to set up a round robin tournament
-
- on your win32 computer with winboard. The author is Jori Ostrovskij.
-
-
-
- http://koti.mbnet.fi/~jorio/tourney/
-
-
-
- A discussion forum on winboard is online at:
-
- http://f11.parsimony.net/forum16635/
-
-
-
- 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
-
- four" of chess databases are Chess Assistant, ChessBase, NICBase, and
-
- Bookup.
-
-
-
- You can purchase data disks for each of these databases. NICBase and
-
- ChessBase are game-oriented, Chess Assistant is position or tree
-
- oriented as is Bookup. While Bookup is primarily known for studying
-
- openings it really is also useful for endings.
-
-
-
- Chessbase 8.0 http://www.chessbase.com/ The ultimate in databases.
-
-
-
-
-
- ChessBase 8 for Windows; http://www.chessbase.com/
-
-
-
- Multiple games may be viewed simultaneously, each one may be
- miniaturized so
-
- that 6 or more games may be visible, each with independent controls.
- The same
-
- game may be viewed at different stages. It is easy to edit or add
- alternate
-
- lines and comments, annotations or "?", "!", etc to any game in your
- database.
-
- Just begin using your mouse to enter the moves or click on the
-
- appropriate icon to add comments. You do not have to switch to any other
-
- submenu area. This is an incredible convenience and an amazing time
-
- saver. The game may then be saved either in the original database or an
-
- alternate or "training" database. Several games may be combined. If you
-
- are studying a particular opening and want to combine 4 or 5 games that
-
- exemplify this opening, you may combine them together as alternate lines
-
- of each other. Highlight the games, press the enter key and the games
-
- will be combined together. ECO type viewing of the lines is available
-
- one mouse click away. Searching and sorting on a variety of fields is
-
- available. Classification by ECO is one Control-C away. Besides the
-
- oridinary position search a feature called "find novelty" features a
-
- modified position search which will find games that are similar to the
-
- game that you are viewing or have just entered. It will search the
-
- currently open database. The printing and publishing features are
-
- exceptional, and like other truetype windows printing programs,
-
- extremely easy to use.
-
- An helpful feature is Alternate-F1, which turns on tool-tips and floats
- a
-
- bubble over the icons telling what each does as your mouse passes over
-
- it. ChessBase magazine includes approximately 1,000 games every second
-
- month, 25% - 50% annotated, along with a section on tactics, endgames,
-
- dramatic master errors and an opening study. These may be added to your
-
- database choices within CBW. $115.
-
-
-
- The TASC System-TascBase Tasc has a fine looking and interesting program
-
- available. The complete information may be seen at their web site along
-
- with information on a variety of their products. The Tasc ChessSystem
-
- Demos of Chessica, Tascbase, Tasc Chess Tutor - Clubmate Clubmate is
-
- database software for Windows. ClubMate provides a huge range of
-
- powerful features at a low price.Whether you want to record your own
-
- triumphs and disasters, study openings, or collect thousands of games by
-
- masters, ClubMate gives you ease of use, clear presentation. speed of
-
- data retrieval, and excellent technical support. And if that's not
-
- enough, ClubMate has a free upgrade policy. Clubmate was formerly
-
- freeware, then shareware and now costs approximately $64. A functional
-
- demo is available at their home page. Clubmate - Database Software
-
- 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;
-
-
- SmartChess, available from R&D (Chess)Publishing. 800-425-3555 2679
- State
- Highway 70, Manasquan, NJ 08736
-
- Macintosh Software Contact: Paul Hodges
-
- ("mailto:hodges@smartchess.com"hodges@smartchess.com )
-
- SmartChess Web: http://www.smartchess.com
-
-
-
- Chess Assistant 6.1 http://www.chessassistant.com/
-
-
-
- Bookup http://www.bookup.com/ Transpositional database and more for
-
- training. Free limited version is available at the website.
-
-
-
- While Bookup initially gained its reputation for opening study, it is
-
- also useful for many more aspects of chess. FM Chuck Schulien has
-
- written a Bookup book called "100 Essential Endings" which contains
-
- 7,000 positions. This follows his "King & Pawn" set of endgame studies.
-
- The "Rubinstein Collection" is FM Chuck Schulien's more advanced
-
- analysis of Akiba Rubinstein's instructive endings. Bookup may also be
-
- used for middle game study. Entering positions from your favorite
-
- middlegame or tactics book will be helpful. You can than set Bookup to
-
- training and test your ability to handle these positions. Bookup can
-
- also be integrated with several chess computer programs. These programs
-
- all utilize the EPD format. More information on the expanding list of
-
- chess computers can be obtained directly from Bookup. This is useful to
-
- generate an analysis of the postions in your specific book.
-
- [21.2] Freeware/Lowcost Database Software:
-
- SCID freeware database http://scid.sourceforge.net/
-
- If you have the patience to set everything up, this is a full sourcecode
- available database with many features.
-
- ChessBase Light http://www.chessbase.com/download/cblight/index.asp
-
- Chessbase Light was designed to be a special limited version of
- ChessBase 6.0
- and is available for free download. It is limited to 8000 games per
- database and supports the CBH format of ChessBase 6 and Fritz and the
- PGN
- format.
-
- Within the 8000 games limit you may save, copy, convert, annotate,
- print,
- search, analyse, merge and classify games.
-
- Help and tips are available at the chessbase website. While old, it
- still
- works just fine.
-
-
- ---- The FAQ is compiled and posted by Stephen Pribut
- pribut@yahoo.com .
-
-
-
- Copyright (c), 1995-2003 Stephen M. Pribut.
-
-
-
- Permission to copy all or part of this work is granted for individual
-
- use, and for copies within a scholastic or academic setting. Copies may
-
- not be made or distributed for resale. The no warranty, and copyright
-
- notice must be retained verbatim and be displayed conspicuously. You
-
- need written authorization before you can include this FAQ in a book
-
- and/or a CDROM archive, and/or make a translation, and/or publish/mirror
-
- on a website (scholastic and academic use excepted). If anyone needs
-
- other permissions that aren't covered by the above, please contact the
-
- author.
-
-
-
- No Warranty: This work is provided on an "as is" basis. The copyright
-
- holder makes no warranty whatsoever, either express or implied,
-
- regarding the work, including warranties with respect to merchantability
-
- or fitness for any purpose.
-
-
-