Computer Chess Club Archives


Search

Terms

Messages

Subject: Re: not really!

Author: martin fierz

Date: 13:42:15 01/11/04

Go up one level in this thread


On January 11, 2004 at 16:11:06, Tom Kerrigan wrote:

>On January 10, 2004 at 16:24:59, Jim Bodkins wrote:
>
>>The US doesnt play chess really. USCF has 90,000 members out of 1/3 billion
>>people and just went bankrupt (over about $300,000 - chump change to a pro
>>basketball player) and had to sell its store to an english firm. Most of the top
>>US players (USCF) are immigrants not native.
>>
>>I'm a native American, so dont get mad. We play baseball not chess. Chess isnt
>>culturally a part of the US at all. People (Garry) come here mainly because of
>>money not chess. Chess software doesnt interest most programmers in my
>>experience. OS's, databases etc do.
>>
>>The US will get hammered, but the guys will probably have fun anyway.
>>
>>... oh, and we do Mars missions. :)
>
>I believe people on this message board have forgotten their history. :) Shannon
>was American, the revolutionary programs MacHack and CHESS were American, the
>world champions Belle, Deep Thought, and Cray Blitz were American.

you are forgetting the first computer chess programmer - alan turing, not
exactly american :-)

>I'd say computer chess is a fairly significant part of American culture.

and this is the wrong way round: some americans made very significant
contributions to computer chess. but "part of the american culture"?? there are
many things that come to my mind when i think about american culture, both
positive and negative (think football, baseball, everbody having guns, free
speech, the whole idea of the american dream etc). but certainly not computer
chess...

cheers
  martin



This page took 0.02 seconds to execute

Last modified: Thu, 15 Apr 21 08:11:13 -0700

Current Computer Chess Club Forums at Talkchess. This site by Sean Mintz.