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2008-01-10
, 04:17
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Posts: 18 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
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#2
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2008-01-10
, 08:57
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Posts: 5,795 |
Thanked: 3,151 times |
Joined on Feb 2007
@ Agoura Hills Calif
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#3
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The Following User Says Thank You to geneven For This Useful Post: | ||
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2008-01-10
, 12:01
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Posts: 739 |
Thanked: 159 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ Germany - Munich
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#4
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Thanks to the developer that brought this to OS2008. I'm sure it must be the same one who brought Eboard (and a sample of Xboard) to us.
The chessboard is cut off so that one of the rows is not totally visible. Maybe there is/will be a workaround for that.
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2008-01-10
, 12:59
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Posts: 246 |
Thanked: 204 times |
Joined on Jun 2007
@ Potsdam (Germany)
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#5
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2008-01-18
, 13:27
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Posts: 27 |
Thanked: 4 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
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#6
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I nearly fell off the bed I was lying on when browsing the Installable Programs on my N800 running OS2008. Scid was there! I had no idea it was being worked on for the N8xx series.
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The Following User Says Thank You to scottfranklin For This Useful Post: | ||
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2008-01-18
, 13:47
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Posts: 739 |
Thanked: 159 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ Germany - Munich
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#7
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2008-08-04
, 23:55
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Posts: 5,795 |
Thanked: 3,151 times |
Joined on Feb 2007
@ Agoura Hills Calif
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#8
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2008-08-05
, 09:46
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Posts: 4,274 |
Thanked: 5,358 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ Looking at y'all and sighing
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#9
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2008-08-05
, 16:42
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Posts: 739 |
Thanked: 159 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ Germany - Munich
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#10
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Scid, which stands for something like Shawn's Chess Internet Database is the only program that a real chess expert (like me) would be very interested in on a tablet. The problem with Eboard, which isn't yet available for OS2008 but was for OS2007, is that it lets you play online but it is just too slow for the very quick games that are popular in Internet chess hotspots such as ICC (www.chessclub.com) and FICS (www.freechess.org). These are exciting human-to-human chess sites, not the boring computer play that you can get almost anywhere. (Of course, there are other chess sites, such as Yahoo and Microsoft, but in my opinion the main good ones are the ones I listed above and a few others, such as the one associated with ChessBase.)
Anyway, back to SCID. Its job is to collect chess games for you and display them to you. This is very important for good chessplayers, because modern chess is largely a game based on research. You secretly work on new developments in the chess world (yes, there are still new developments, after centuries of play) and you need to look at examples of what is being played now or in the lines you specialize in to plan accordingly.
Scid is a great program for displaying games and organizing your collection.
The version I just happened on on my N800 is not quite right. The chessboard is cut off so that one of the rows is not totally visible. Maybe there is/will be a workaround for that. Otherwise, this very powerful tool looks great, however. I'm going to start using it right now...
Thanks to the developer that brought this to OS2008. I'm sure it must be the same one who brought Eboard (and a sample of Xboard) to us.
BTW: Scid is still under active development. I already subscribe to a SCID mailing list, and though Shawn himself appears to be inactive, new people are taking its development over, and have apparently made a version that DOES play on the Internet, and whats more, apparently allows you to CHEAT on the Internet! This is actually bad, though interesting -- it is not ethical to use a database while playing a poor human who doesn't have access to one.
The reason for this behavior is that it is easier for the developer to allow you to cheat with Scid than it is to prevent you.
This has nothing to do with the person who ported Scid to OS2008, I hasten to point out, and the version we have doesn't allow play on the Internet (I assume -- I haven't yet looked carefully at it.)
Edit: It turns out that you can change the size of the chessboard , and size 3 works pretty much perfectly for me.
Last edited by geneven; 2008-01-10 at 04:04.