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Subject: Re: Moderation: Chessprograms and copyprotection

Author: O. Veli

Date: 04:45:57 12/12/99

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On December 11, 1999 at 23:13:25, Coconuts2000 wrote:
>
>6 was also a victim. Chess is becoming more popular, and because of this, there
>is a high demand for chess software. Protection is very pointless; anything and

  People who buy cracked software should also be blamed. If chess is becoming
popular, and if you do not want to pay money, than you should stick with a
freeware. Rebel Decade 2 will beat most if not all of people who want to play
chess but who are not tournament players. They should be satisfied with it. On
the other hand, if they want the strongest then they should chip in. If you do
not like DOS, then stick with Crafty + Winboard. There is no difference between
Fritz6 and Decade 2 for such players, since both programs are  too strong for
them.

  Of course these people do not know about these programs. PC World gave Chess
IT as a top chess program! Can you believe that? I think that programmers should
make freeware versions of their programs, such as Decade 2, and send it to top
computer magazines to be distributed in their CDs. That way general public will
learn more about the programs, and hopefully decide to buy the stronger full
version. If you have Fritz Light, say different from Fritz 6 only in playing
strenght, I highly doubt that people would be willing to pay anything for a
cracked version of Fritz 6.

  I recently bought CT-ART 3 and a friend of mine liked the demo very much. He
asked for the CD so that he can copy it. This guy does not need the CD, it is
too sophisticated for him, yet he sees nothing wrong with this!

>coming soon and chess tiger. It's not fair for the people who make them, but
>what can be done?

  Remember the ugly dongle ChessBase 6 came with? Physical copy protection.



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