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Tag Archive 'Software'

19.01.2010
– Edgar Colle (1897–1932) was a Belgian chess who scored excellent results
in world-class tournaments. He died tragically at the age of 34, and is mainly remembered
for the Colle Opening System 1.d4 d5 2.Nf3 Nf6 3.e3. This, as Dennis Monokroussos
relates in this week's Playchess lecture,
was not what he was able to play in a beautiful game against Ernst Grünfeld.
Be there at 9 p.m. EST.

Advertisement

Yasser Seirawan:
My best games

Grandmaster Yasser Seirawan began playing chess in the summer of 1972 and by 1979 he had won the World Junior Championship and in January of 1980 earned his final Grandmaster norm. What had he learned in seven and a half years that propelled him so far so quickly?
More information...

Playchess training with FM Dennis Monokroussos

The Belgian master Edgar Colle is best known for the eponymous Colle System,
a placid-looking opening he turned into a dangerous attacking system. As is
often the case with the openings named for players, most of us probably know
a lot more about the opening than we do about the man who developed it into
something poisonous.

Edgar Colle (1897–1932) was a Belgian chess master who scored
excellent results in major international tournaments, including first
at Amsterdam 1926, ahead of Savielly Tartakower and future world champion
Max Euwe; first at Meran 1926, ahead of Esteban Canal; and first at Scarborough
1930, ahead of Maroczy and Rubinstein). His playing career was hampered
by ill health. He survived three difficult operations for a gastric ulcer
and died after a fourth at the age of 34. Colle is remembered today primarily
for his introduction of the chess opening now known as the Colle System:
1.d4 d5 2.Nf3 Nf6 3.e3. In the picture we see Edgar Colle (second
from right) standing next to Salo Landau during a game Rubinstein vs Tartakower.

So let's fix that. In our ChessBase show this week we'll have a few things
to say about the man and see him in action against an even more notable name,
Ernst Grünfeld. Colle tried to play the Colle, but Grünfeld avoided
the main line and went for a Queen's Indian setup. It didn't matter: Colle showed
that he was more than a one-trick pony, and gave us a game of value. First of
all, he demonstrates how White can build an attack against a Queen's Indian
approach; second, he shows us what to do once the pieces are in place! Colle
won in beautiful style – but you'll have to join me Wednesday night at
9 p.m. ET (3 a.m. Thursday morning, CET) for the details.

To watch, just log on to the Playchess server at the given time, go to the
Broadcast room, and then find and select Colle-Grünfeld under the Games
tab. Hope to see you there!

Dennis Monokroussos'
Radio ChessBase
lectures begin on Wednesdays at 9 p.m. EST, which translates to 02:00h GMT,
03:00 Paris/Berlin, 13:00h Sydney (on Thursday). You can find the times for
different locations in the world at World
Time and Date
, with exact times for most larger cities here.

And you
can watch older lectures by Dennis Monokroussos offline in
the Chess Media System room of Playchess:

Enter the above archive room and click on "Games" to see the lectures.


Monokroussos in Mexico: World Championship 2007
 

Dennis Monokroussos is 43, lives in South Bend, IN, where
he teaches chess and has worked as an adjunct professor of philosophy at the
University of Notre Dame and Indiana University-South Bend.

At one time he was one of the strongest juniors in the U.S. and has reached
a peak rating of 2434 USCF, but several long breaks from tournament play have
made him rusty. He is now resuming tournament chess in earnest, hoping to reach
new heights.

Dennis has been working as a chess teacher for ten years now, giving lessons
to adults and kids both in person and on the internet, worked for a number of
years for New York’s Chess In The Schools program, where he was one of
the coaches of the 1997-8 US K-8 championship team from the Bronx, and was very
active in working with many of CITS’s most talented juniors.

When Dennis Monokroussos presents a game, there are usually two main areas
of focus: the opening-to-middlegame transition and the key moments of the middlegame
(or endgame, when applicable). With respect to the latter, he attempts to present
some serious analysis culled from his best sources (both text and database),
which he has checked with his own efforts and then double-checked with his chess
software.


Playchess Training with IM Merijn van Delft

Everyone is invited to join this weekly training hour on Wednesday evening.
Together we will have a look at the most recent grandmaster games. Recurring
themes during our analyses and discussions are the latest opening developments
and how to work on your own chess.

A word about myself: I was born (March 13, 1979) and raised in Apeldoorn, The
Netherlands. In 1995 I won the Dutch U16 Championship and played the European
Championship in Poland and the World Championship in Brasil. In 1998 I moved
to Amsterdam to study psychology and had a great time there. In 2003 I met my
wife Evi Zickelbein and ever since we've been living together in Hamburg, Germany.
In 2004 I made both master titles: one at the university and one in chess. Since
2005 I've been working fulltime in the chess world: training, coaching, writing,
organizing and still actively playing myself. By now I have about fifteen years
of experience as a chess trainer. Together with my dad I wrote a book
about chess training
(Schaaktalent Ontwikkelen), of which the Dutch
version
is already available and the English
version
will follow April 2010.

IM Merijn van Delft's lecture starts at 20:00h Central European Time (Berlin,
Paris, Rome), which translates to 19:00h London. You can find the times for
different locations in the world at World
Time and Date
. Exact times for most larger cities are here.
The lecture is in the "Broadcast" room of Playchess. It is free for
Premium Playchess members (50 Ducats for others).


Links

The lectures are broadcast live on the chess server Playchess.com.
If you are not a member you can download the free PGN reader ChessBase
Light
, which gives you immediate access. You can also use the program
to read, replay and analyse PGN games. New and enhanced: CB Light 2009!

Chessbase.com

Read Full Post »

19.01.2010
– A total of 445 players competed in the first qualifier for the FIDE Internet Championship, and tested the tournament software on the Playchess server to its limit. Everything went smoothly, and ten players have qualified for the final on January 30. The second qualifier is on Wednesday evening, the third on Saturday afternoon, with three more to follow. You can play in as many as you like.

Advertisement

Yasser Seirawan:
My best games

Grandmaster Yasser Seirawan began playing chess in the summer of 1972 and by 1979 he had won the World Junior Championship and in January of 1980 earned his final Grandmaster norm. What had he learned in seven and a half years that propelled him so far so quickly?
More information...

FIDE World Blitz Championship 2010 Internet Tournament

The World Chess Federation FIDE, the chess
server Playchess and the Russian Aeroflot
Open
invite you to participate in the 2010 World Blitz Championship and
offer you a chance to test your skill in blitz chess with the very best.

On February 18th 2010 a double nine-round Swiss blitz tournament will be held
in the complex “Izmailovo” in Moscow, which will have the status
of qualification for the World Blitz Championship 2010 (Final). The final tournament
will take place in November 2010. It will consist of 20 players (ten participants
of Mikhail Tal Memorial 2010, six winners of the Qualification Tournament of
Feb. 18, 2010 and four to six wild cards. The prize fund of the Qualification
Tournament constitutes EUR 40,000.

You have the chance to win a package, including travel costs and accommodation
in Moscow for two days, to take part in the February 18 Blitz Qualifier. You
can do this by taking part in the Internet tournament, which will be held from
January 19th to 30th, 2010 on the Playchess server.

The next rounds
Here are the dates of play. All times are given Central European Time
(Greenwich Standard Time +1) which is the time-zone used on the server.

Preliminary # 1     
Tuesday, 19th January 2010, 24.00 CET (midnight)
Preliminary # 2 Wednesday, 20th January 2010, 18.00 CET
Preliminary # 3 Saturday, 23rd January 2010, 15.00 CET
Preliminary # 4 Monday, 25th January 2010, 20.00 CET
Preliminary # 5 Tuesday, 26th January 2010, 18.00 CET
Preliminary # 6 Thursday, 28th January 2010, 20.00 CET
Final Saturday, 30th January 2010, 16.00 CET

First preliminary

The first preliminary was played at 19th January 2010 (Tuesday night) 24.00
CET. It attracted 445 players who entered the competition. This appearance is
an all-time high for tournaments on the server which, we are pleased to note,
took the load quite easily. The tournament was run by Italian Sysop and Tournament
Director Andrea Natoli. It lasted approximately four hours, and in the end you
needed twelve points (and a better tiebreak) from 17 games to get a place in
the final. The race for the top ten places was fairly close, as even the number
two in the end has scored just 13 points.

Below you will find the final result of the qualifying players and the top
100 scorers. Some words of explanation: The Elo is the server rating at the
start of the tournament. If a player had just registered on the server he or
she might have had no server rating. The top ten players are given with their
real names as given in the personal information. They have not been checked
for right spelling etc.

Qualifiers for the final round

# Nickname rating Player Score   TB
1 Omnislash 3285 GM Hrair Simonian (ARM) 14.5  
2 Onor 2826 Chris Jericho (BEL) 13.0 124.00
3 Khismatullin   Boris Khismatullin (RUS) 13.0 121.50
4 Tojapolska 2168 Kryzsiek Panecki (POL) 13.0 109.50
5 LiLip0o0o0oT 3105 IM Homayoan Toufighi (IRN) 12.5 119.00
6 Harutjunyan G 2815 GM Georg Harutjunyan (ARM) 12.5 118.00
7 IturrizagaE   Eduardo Iturrizago (VEN) 12.5 117.50
8 Moreno Ruiz 2580 Moreno Ruiz (ESP) 12.5 109.00
9 Hausigel 3073 Roland Voigt (GER) 12.0 118.50
10 Storne 2636 IM Nikola Vesterovic 12.0 110.50

Top 100 scorers

11 Am i 2275 12.0 101.50
12 Shark 2824 11.5 119.00
13 Pit man 2847 11.5 116.50
14 Yuka 2915 11.5 114.00
15 Der Rentner 2456 11.5 108.00
16 Uzbektiger 2455 11.5 106.50
17 IPinheiro 2461 11.5 106.00
18 Ivanisevic I 2845 11.5 106.00
19 Xeneixe89 2351 11.5 105.00
20 Bloodthirsty 2438 11.5 103.00
21 XDPS 2420 11.5 102.50
22 Miguel Abuelo 1820 11.5 101.50
23 Spassky 2254 11.5 101.00
24 Jia Haoxiang 2667 11.5 99.50
25 Jara cimrman 2469 11.5 99.00
26 James Joyce 2884 11.0 109.00
27 Padentro 2659 11.0 107.00
28 Robert-prox 2390 11.0 105.50
29 Anqi 2144 11.0 105.00
30 Dangor 2421 11.0 104.00
31 Novoselski 2594 11.0 99.00
32 Indian lover   11.0 91.50
33 Nicebrutus 2114 11.0 90.00
34 Frank Curiel 1836 11.0 76.50
35 So0o0o0zi 2665 10.5 113.00
36 QueenGhost 2522 10.5 111.50
37 CAME ON 2560 10.5 109.50
38 Siberija 2608 10.5 108.50
39 Hophip 2581 10.5 105.00
40 Energie 73 2418 10.5 101.00
41 Carl Hermann 2217 10.5 100.00
42 Micerinos 2250 10.5 99.50
43 DiegoAbarca   10.5 99.00
44 Afga2   10.5 97.00
45 jasrom 2142 10.5 96.50
46 Javier bleda   10.5 94.50
47 Johan23 2219 10.5 94.00
48 DirtyDeki1 2547 10.5 90.00
49 Maooso 1706 10.5 86.50
50 Xxcreoqueganoxx 1806 10.5 77.00
51 Dragon war 2449 10.0 110.00
52 Blind Squirrel 2506 10.0 100.50
53 antoine2 2745 10.0 99.00
54 Fatal_juice 1518 10.0 97.50
55 Von Herman 2276 10.0 97.00
56 Degatz 2311 10.0 95.50
57 Monomah 2088 10.0 93.50
58 DueSant 2031 10.0 92.50
59 Letzluttor   10.0 92.00
60 UST B 2153 10.0 91.00
61 Kaszub 2214 10.0 91.00
62 ali-normal 2285 10.0 90.50
63 Imagine24   10.0 90.00
64 RaulJr 1933 10.0 87.50
65 LaPiovra1 1755 10.0 86.00
66 Bojokrupanj1 2018 10.0 81.00
67 Infinitymoves 2060 10.0 77.00
68 Kovalyov Anton 2897 9.5 114.00
69 Ceu 2179 9.5 104.50
70 Smyslov2006 1987 9.5 94.50
71 B3wins 2109 9.5 94.00
72 Jorgeram 1882 9.5 92.50
73 Amois 2055 9.5 87.50
74 Akagan 1822 9.5 86.00
75 Schnubbi 2230 9.5 86.00
76 Reti 2130 9.5 86.00
77 Yessjah 2002 9.5 85.00
78 Criollo 1694 9.5 85.00
79 TomeMaster 2169 9.5 85.00
80 Fauli93 2015 9.5 83.50
81 Ns500 1869 9.5 82.50
82 Kamilov 1917 9.5 81.00
83 Newb 2041 9.5 79.50
84 Gazzza   9.5 69.50
85 Bartas 2910 9.0 101.00
86 Klappspaten 2360 9.0 99.00
87 Naked Queen 2256 9.0 98.00
88 Tandoor 2173 9.0 96.00
89 Kasparicy_ 2235 9.0 93.00
90 J_almaguer 2167 9.0 91.50
91 X-rouge 2407 9.0 91.50
92 ThePatzerMKD 1960 9.0 91.00
93 Thecurv 2037 9.0 89.00
94 Antacolorado 1643 9.0 88.00
95 Badroddine   9.0 88.00
96 David Ojeda   9.0 87.50
97 Legiam 1905 9.0 85.50
98 Mihai_Pachia 2063 9.0 82.00
99 Seewald 1798 9.0 81.00
100 Pedromartinez 2026 9.0 80.00

Read Full Post »

13.01.2010
– On February 18, 2010, during the Aeroflot tournament, a double nine-round Swiss blitz tournament will be held in Moscow – a qualifier for the World Blitz Championship to be held in November 2010 after the Tal Memorial. Would you like to take part in the Feb. 18 tournament? Three places, including flight expenses and hotel in Moscow, are available to the winners of this FIDE Playchess qualifier.

Advertisement

Yasser Seirawan:
My best games

Grandmaster Yasser Seirawan began playing chess in the summer of 1972 and by 1979 he had won the World Junior Championship and in January of 1980 earned his final Grandmaster norm. What had he learned in seven and a half years that propelled him so far so quickly?
More information...

FIDE World Blitz Championship 2010 Internet Tournament

The World Chess Federation FIDE, the chess
server Playchess and the Russian Aeroflot
Open
invite you to participate in the 2010 World Blitz Championship and
offer you a chance to test your skill in blitz chess with the very best.

On February 18th 2010 a double nine-round Swiss blitz tournament will be held
in the complex “Izmailovo” in Moscow, which will have the status
of qualification for the World Blitz Championship 2010 (Final). The final tournament
will take place in November 2010. It will consist of 20 players (ten participants
of Mikhail Tal Memorial 2010, six winners of the Qualification Tournament of
Feb. 18, 2010 and four to six wild cards. The prize fund of the Qualification
Tournament constitutes EUR 40,000.

You have the chance to win a package, including travel costs and accommodation
in Moscow for two days, to take part in the February 18 Blitz Qualifier. You
can do this by taking part in the Internet tournament, which will be held from
January 19th to 30th, 2010 on the Playchess server.

The Playchess Qualifier

The tournament will be played with six preliminaries and one final. All tournaments
will be Swiss tournaments with 17 rounds. Throughout the event the rate of play
is three minutes plus two seconds increment per move (3+2).

Who can play?
The preliminary tournaments are open for anyone who has an account on playchess.com.
If you do not have an account you can create one after downloading the Playchess
client as described below. Any player can participate in as many preliminaries
as he or she likes.

Entry fee
The participation in the tournament is free.

Qualification for the final
The top ten players of each preliminary have the right to play in the final.
In case of a tie the tie will be broken by progressive score. If the progressive
score is still even all players who are involved in the progressive score will
get a place in the final.

Qualification for Moscow, 18th February 2010
The top three players from the final, held on January 30th 2010, will win a
trip to Moscow to participate in the Moscow stage for World Blitz Championship
final. Here in case of a tie the Tournament Director will set up tiebreak games
immediately after the tournament. The mode depends on the number of players
who are involved in these tiebreak and the number of spots available.

Dates
Here are the dates of play. All times are given Central European Time
(Greenwich Standard Time +1) which is the time-zone used on the server.

Preliminary # 1      Tuesday, 19th January 2010, 24.00 CET (midnight)
Preliminary # 2 Wednesday, 20th January 2010, 18.00 CET
Preliminary # 3 Saturday, 23rd January 2010, 15.00 CET
Preliminary # 4 Monday, 25th January 2010, 20.00 CET
Preliminary # 5 Tuesday, 26th January 2010, 18.00 CET
Preliminary # 6 Thursday, 28th January 2010, 20.00 CET
Final Saturday, 30th January 2010, 16.00 CET

Prizes

The following prizes have been donated by Aeroflot (travel to Moscow) and ChessBase
GmbH (software):

Winner:       Travel costs to Moscow, accommodation for two nights in a single room,
plus a trophy
Places 2 and 3 Travel costs to Moscow, accommodation for two nights in a single room
Places 4 to 7 A ChessBase MegaPackage each
Places 8 to 11 ChessBase Mega Database 2010
Places 12 to 15     Fritz 12 – the famous chess playing program and strong analysis
tool

Any player who made a least +1 and completed the tournament gets 12 months
premium membership on playchess.com. Players who finish the tournament get six
months premium membership. All prizes are available only to players whose names
are given in the personal information.

There will also be numerous "lucky wins" for the players in the preliminaries.
All players who finish in the places 11, 21, 31, 41, 51, 61, 71, 81, 91, 101,
111, 121, 131, 141 and 151 will win a lucky prize. However, in order to qualify
for a lucky win – in this case 30 days premium membership on playchess.com
– you need a valid serial number on playchess.com.

Becoming a member of Playchess

In order to play in the event you need the Playchess software. The client
that is needed to play in the event is included with any current program in
the ChessBase Shop. If you already own such a program you should install it
and just log into the server.

If
you don't own a ChessBase product with the Playchess client you can download
it free of charge here and
install it on your computer. After installing you will have to restart your
computer and will then find a Playchess icon on your desktop. Double-click it
to start the program.


Click on "Login" to connect with the Playchess server

The program asks you to enter the name for your new account. You are more or
less free to choose a name, but we recommend that you take a moment and look
for one that you will be happy to keep. We cannot change silly names for you
at a later stage. Also please do not use the name of other people, e.g. famous
chess players. Fictional characters are allowed. And of couse do not choose
a name which may be offensive. The nickname (handle) must be not longer than
15 letters. Click "Create New Player Name" to finish.

On the server you will be immediately be asked for personal information. We
recommend you do this properly, because it is essential for this tournament
and it is friendlier to other members. Your email address will never be visible
to other users and is only available for staff members. It is only used to send
you your password if you have forgotten it, or in case of other Playchess issues,
e.g. if you win a prize or qualify for the playoff.

For the start the most important room is the main playing hall. Just enter
it and try playing a few games of chess to get the feel of the client. After
a couple of games you will receive a provisional rating. After five login days
you will become a knight (if you have properly completed your personal information).
We strongly recommend playing a few games before participating in the tournaments
in order to get a feel for the server and to feel at home here.

For full instructions on how to use the Playchess client press F1 for help.
You can also browse through our our online Playchess manual here.

Playing in the tournament

All tournaments of the Playchess World Blitz Championship qualifier will be
played in the "Emanuel Lasker Arena". It is to be found in the "Tournaments"
area (click to open). Once registration has started you just need to click on
the button "Join event" (left, under the list of players). The Director
will register you for the tournament. You will receive a message from the TD
(Tournament Director) in the chat window. This will either be "You are
registered" – then everything is okay and you are in. Or "You
are kibitzing", which means you are not yet registered.

The games will start automatically; the results will be automatically reported
by the software. You have nothing to do but play chess and enjoy yourself. However,
we recommend strongly trying a regular tournament before you play one that really
counts!

Chessbase.com

Read Full Post »

12.01.2010
– We continue this week with our second look at the chess of the great Akiba
Rubinstein, one of the greatest players never to become world champion. Rubinstein
was a supreme master in all phases of the game, of course, but his endgame skill
was legendary. A lofty claim, but we'll see clear evidence for this in this
week's Playchess lecture by Dennis Monokroussos.
9 p.m. EST.

Advertisement

Yasser Seirawan:
My best games

Grandmaster Yasser Seirawan began playing chess in the summer of 1972 and by 1979 he had won the World Junior Championship and in January of 1980 earned his final Grandmaster norm. What had he learned in seven and a half years that propelled him so far so quickly?
More information...

Playchess training with FM Dennis Monokroussos

His victim in our game of the week was Alexander Alekhine, who would go on
to become the fourth world chess champion. Despite the caliber of Rubinstein's
opponent, he managed to win a rook ending that remains a model for us today.
(I would say that's one of the defining features of Rubinstein's greatness;
namely, how often he played games, against players of all levels, that looked
as if they were produced by textbook writers to educate the general public.)
In this one ending, we see beautiful illustrations of such fundamental endgame
ideas as the "do not hurry" rule, the principle of two weaknesses,
the process of inducing weaknesses, prophylaxis and the active king. These principles
may sound like abstractions, but in his hands these tools look as natural as
a baby's smile.


Polish grandmaster Akiba Kiwelowicz Rubinstein

So: to join in the fun, here's what you do. First, log on to the Playchess
server at 9 p.m. ET Wednesday night (= 3 a.m. Thursday morning CET). Second,
go to the Broadcast room. Third, find Rubinstein-Alekhineunder the Games tab,
double-click on it, and you're good to go. Hope to see you there!

Dennis Monokroussos'
Radio ChessBase
lectures begin on Wednesdays at 9 p.m. EST, which translates to 02:00h GMT,
03:00 Paris/Berlin, 13:00h Sydney (on Thursday). You can find the times for
different locations in the world at World
Time and Date
, with exact times for most larger cities here.

And you
can watch older lectures by Dennis Monokroussos offline in
the Chess Media System room of Playchess:

Enter the above archive room and click on "Games" to see the lectures.


Monokroussos in Mexico: World Championship 2007
 

Dennis Monokroussos is 43, lives in South Bend, IN, where
he teaches chess and has worked as an adjunct professor of philosophy at the
University of Notre Dame and Indiana University-South Bend.

At one time he was one of the strongest juniors in the U.S. and has reached
a peak rating of 2434 USCF, but several long breaks from tournament play have
made him rusty. He is now resuming tournament chess in earnest, hoping to reach
new heights.

Dennis has been working as a chess teacher for ten years now, giving lessons
to adults and kids both in person and on the internet, worked for a number of
years for New York’s Chess In The Schools program, where he was one of
the coaches of the 1997-8 US K-8 championship team from the Bronx, and was very
active in working with many of CITS’s most talented juniors.

When Dennis Monokroussos presents a game, there are usually two main areas
of focus: the opening-to-middlegame transition and the key moments of the middlegame
(or endgame, when applicable). With respect to the latter, he attempts to present
some serious analysis culled from his best sources (both text and database),
which he has checked with his own efforts and then double-checked with his chess
software.


Playchess Training with IM Merijn van Delft

Everyone is invited to join this weekly training hour on Wednesday evening.
Together we will have a look at the most recent grandmaster games. Recurring
themes during our analyses and discussions are the latest opening developments
and how to work on your own chess.

A word about myself: I was born (March 13, 1979) and raised in Apeldoorn, The
Netherlands. In 1995 I won the Dutch U16 Championship and played the European
Championship in Poland and the World Championship in Brasil. In 1998 I moved
to Amsterdam to study psychology and had a great time there. In 2003 I met my
wife Evi Zickelbein and ever since we've been living together in Hamburg, Germany.
In 2004 I made both master titles: one at the university and one in chess. Since
2005 I've been working fulltime in the chess world: training, coaching, writing,
organizing and still actively playing myself. By now I have about fifteen years
of experience as a chess trainer. Together with my dad I wrote a book
about chess training
(Schaaktalent Ontwikkelen), of which the Dutch
version
is already available and the English
version
will follow April 2010.

IM Merijn van Delft's lecture starts at 20:00h Central European Time (Berlin,
Paris, Rome), which translates to 19:00h London. You can find the times for
different locations in the world at World
Time and Date
. Exact times for most larger cities are here.
The lecture is in the "Broadcast" room of Playchess. It is free for
Premium Playchess members (50 Ducats for others).


Links

The lectures are broadcast live on the chess server Playchess.com.
If you are not a member you can download the free PGN reader ChessBase
Light
, which gives you immediate access. You can also use the program
to read, replay and analyse PGN games. New and enhanced: CB Light 2009!

Chessbase.com

Read Full Post »

07.01.2010
– Did you know you can get the famous database program, that all the top professionals
use, free of charge? Immediately – like right now? Just download ChessBase
Light and start working with the latest version of our games management software.
How to use the program is explained in the latest ChessBase Workshop installment
by Steven Lopez in streaming
video.

Advertisement

:
Deep Shredder 12 - Multiprocessor Version

Deep Shredder 12 by Stefan Meyer Kahlen. No other chess program
has won so many world championship titles. The new edition of Deep Shredder is stronger than all previous versions. Meyer Kahlen: “The improvements are visible all over
the place. Especially the search and the evaluation have become much more precise. The engine is 100 Elo points stronger than the predecessor Shredder 11.”
Available from 14 January 2010

More information...

Chessbase.com

Read Full Post »

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