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Subject: Re: Dedicated Chess Computers - Fidelity

Author: John Coffey

Date: 09:36:23 01/18/99

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On January 18, 1999 at 10:20:57, Charlie GOLD wrote:

>
>     Sid Samole started Fidelity back in 1976/7 with the Chess Challenger I. It
>was a plastic unit with wood pieces and a "wood" border. Input was key-in. They
>were produced with a flaw...the coordinates were reversed; a-h going up and 1-8
>sidewise. It had one level of play and no other features. It only operated on
>the mains. It was the FIRST commercial micro chess computer on the market.
>     In 1977 the company came out with the Chess Challenger III ( I don't know
>of a two) which was the same physically, had the same features, plus 3 levels of
>play, monitor mode, position verification, and the coordinates corrected. It,
>also, ran on mains only.
>     In 1978/9 they came out with the CC7-the same as the first two but the
>pieces were now plastic. It had all the features of the 3 plus 7 levels of play
>(interchangeable during play), set-up mode, mate in 2, sound control, change
>sides, and a small opening book. It still only ran on mains.
>     Stay tuned for more exciting?! news about Chess Challengers...


The Chess Challenger 10 came out before the 7.  It was very similar to the 7,
except that the 7 played somewhat better.  As far as I could tell, the 7 was
no stronger than 1200.

John Coffey



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