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Ragtime
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25 Nov 2008, 1:15 pm

I just got my wife into it -- got to teach her the game from scratch, which was great fun! And she's already into it enough to keep wanting to play. And she shows a natural talent for it already. Seems like an ideal game for autistics. And it's one of the three skills child prodigies most often excell at, the other two being music and math. I would think all three of those could have to do with autism, actually.


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Orwell
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25 Nov 2008, 1:21 pm

I love chess. And the tendency towards greater spatial intelligence could give autistics an edge, along with the autistic focus helping direct enough dedication towards learning the game to reach actual mastery.


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25 Nov 2008, 2:33 pm

Orwell wrote:
I love chess. And the tendency towards greater spatial intelligence could give autistics an edge, along with the autistic focus helping direct enough dedication towards learning the game to reach actual mastery.


Ive always enjoyed chess. I'm not really good but none of my friends give me a challenge (except for one, who has won state championships - and he trashes me).

I do like Go though. I must be not as good at it, because I have several friends against whom I can not guarantee victory.



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25 Nov 2008, 2:54 pm

I like playing it and all, (it was quite popular at the break room in my last job) but I have pretty variable performance, honestly.



gismo
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25 Nov 2008, 3:00 pm

I'm pretty good, I'm better than most people my age, but I couldn't beat an adult.



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25 Nov 2008, 3:02 pm

I really like chess a lot, but I'm not very good at it, or at best I'm very variable. Sometimes it clicks, other times I get so focused on one strategy that I make dumb moves.



Ragtime
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25 Nov 2008, 3:12 pm

The sole reason my dad bought a computer was so he could play internet chess with it. :lol:
What made it cool was that he also had a big-screen TV, and adaptor that displayed the computer's output
on that giant screen. You could see who's online, click on players, and challenge them to a game.

Personally, I prefer playing in person. Then, you know that your not playing two or three brainstorming people at once, which is cheating. And "postal chess"? Crazy. You actually mail each move to someone around the world, who mails back his/her responses. Talk about slow!


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gismo
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25 Nov 2008, 3:19 pm

Ragtime wrote:
The sole reason my dad bought a computer was so he could play internet chess with it. :lol:
What made it cool was that he also had a big-screen TV, and adaptor that displayed the computer's output
on that giant screen. You could see who's online, click on players, and challenge them to a game.

Personally, I prefer playing in person. Then, you know that your not playing two or three brainstorming people at once, which is cheating. And "postal chess"? Crazy. You actually mail each move to someone around the world, who mails back his/her responses. Talk about slow!


That's like instant messaging by sending quick messages via E-Mail. :lol:

There was an online chess tournament in Switzerland in 2002, during which eveybody gathered at some big convention center to play webcam chess, I mean, that's taking it a little too far...



Ragtime
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25 Nov 2008, 3:33 pm

Anyone like playing chess computers / computer programs?

Nowadays, computer chess partners are mostly software,
but I think Fidelity still makes actual, physical chessboards with computer brains
that can play chess with you. I had one of those long ago.

Oh crap... this is it!!
http://www.ismenio.com/chess_cc10.html

1979! I can't believe how old that thing was!

I remember I beat it on level 6 of 10. Problem with going higher than that is the thing would take forever per move!
The reason being it was only 4 Mhz.


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Last edited by Ragtime on 25 Nov 2008, 5:56 pm, edited 1 time in total.

Ragtime
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25 Nov 2008, 3:41 pm

gismo wrote:
Ragtime wrote:
The sole reason my dad bought a computer was so he could play internet chess with it. :lol:
What made it cool was that he also had a big-screen TV, and adaptor that displayed the computer's output
on that giant screen. You could see who's online, click on players, and challenge them to a game.

Personally, I prefer playing in person. Then, you know that your not playing two or three brainstorming people at once, which is cheating. And "postal chess"? Crazy. You actually mail each move to someone around the world, who mails back his/her responses. Talk about slow!


That's like instant messaging by sending quick messages via E-Mail. :lol:

There was an online chess tournament in Switzerland in 2002, during which eveybody gathered at some big convention center to play webcam chess, I mean, that's taking it a little too far...


It would be cool to do a one-on-one webcam chess game with someone, but I wouldn't have the time for it really,
nor do I have an advanced enough webcam to view a chessboard clearly enough.


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gismo
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25 Nov 2008, 3:50 pm

Ragtime wrote:
gismo wrote:
Ragtime wrote:
The sole reason my dad bought a computer was so he could play internet chess with it. :lol:
What made it cool was that he also had a big-screen TV, and adaptor that displayed the computer's output
on that giant screen. You could see who's online, click on players, and challenge them to a game.

Personally, I prefer playing in person. Then, you know that your not playing two or three brainstorming people at once, which is cheating. And "postal chess"? Crazy. You actually mail each move to someone around the world, who mails back his/her responses. Talk about slow!


That's like instant messaging by sending quick messages via E-Mail. :lol:

There was an online chess tournament in Switzerland in 2002, during which eveybody gathered at some big convention center to play webcam chess, I mean, that's taking it a little too far...


It would be cool to do a one-on-one webcam chess game with someone, but I wouldn't have the time for it really,
nor do I have an advanced enough webcam to view a chessboard clearly enough.


What would be cool, would be a USB Chess set, that after being plugged into the computer, can let you play chess with the board against an online oppoment using online software that comes with it, like of of those electric chess boards you mentioned, except you face other people on the net and pieces move without you having to move them.

They still sell those computer based ones you can play matches against computers with...
http://www.argos.co.uk/static/Product/p ... ECHESS.htm
This one can actually teach you how to play chess..



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25 Nov 2008, 4:13 pm

gismo wrote:
Ragtime wrote:
gismo wrote:
Ragtime wrote:
The sole reason my dad bought a computer was so he could play internet chess with it. :lol:
What made it cool was that he also had a big-screen TV, and adaptor that displayed the computer's output
on that giant screen. You could see who's online, click on players, and challenge them to a game.

Personally, I prefer playing in person. Then, you know that your not playing two or three brainstorming people at once, which is cheating. And "postal chess"? Crazy. You actually mail each move to someone around the world, who mails back his/her responses. Talk about slow!


That's like instant messaging by sending quick messages via E-Mail. :lol:

There was an online chess tournament in Switzerland in 2002, during which eveybody gathered at some big convention center to play webcam chess, I mean, that's taking it a little too far...


It would be cool to do a one-on-one webcam chess game with someone, but I wouldn't have the time for it really,
nor do I have an advanced enough webcam to view a chessboard clearly enough.


What would be cool, would be a USB Chess set, that after being plugged into the computer, can let you play chess with the board against an online oppoment using online software that comes with it, like of of those electric chess boards you mentioned, except you face other people on the net and pieces move without you having to move them.


Yep, that would be cool. I like having the 3-dimensional, physical board, rather than those 2-D software versions that run on PCs/Macs.

gismo wrote:
They still sell those computer based ones you can play matches against computers with...
http://www.argos.co.uk/static/Product/p ... ECHESS.htm
This one can actually teach you how to play chess..


Cool! Ya, they had several in stores just a few years ago, and some moved their own pieces magnetically.
When it took your piece, it would move it completely off the board for you, avoiding collisions with all the other pieces along the way, of course.


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Orwell
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25 Nov 2008, 4:16 pm

gismo wrote:
I'm pretty good, I'm better than most people my age, but I couldn't beat an adult.

In my experience, kids are almost always better than adults at chess. I'm 19, and already too old to really learn to play chess at a high level.

RE; Ragtime: Postal chess: usually this is done by e-mail nowadays, or on dedicated web sites like chess.com. Correspondence chess is very fun because it allows for much deeper analysis of the position than traditional OTB play.


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Ragtime
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25 Nov 2008, 4:41 pm

Orwell wrote:
I'm 19, and already too old to really learn to play chess at a high level.


Oh, I don't know about that... I'm finding, now that I've re-taken up chess, that I have much more patient slyness than I did back when I was younger and only wanted to win, win, win. Now, I actually enjoy the whole game, and since humans' brains reach maturity at around age 30, I'm finding new mental resources that I didn't have before. (I can also attest that that last part has been true for each year of my twenties.)

Orwell wrote:
RE; Ragtime: Postal chess: usually this is done by e-mail nowadays, or on dedicated web sites like chess.com. Correspondence chess is very fun because it allows for much deeper analysis of the position than traditional OTB play.


Interesting. :)


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25 Nov 2008, 8:06 pm

Orwell wrote:
gismo wrote:
I'm pretty good, I'm better than most people my age, but I couldn't beat an adult.

In my experience, kids are almost always better than adults at chess. I'm 19, and already too old to really learn to play chess at a high level.

RE; Ragtime: Postal chess: usually this is done by e-mail nowadays, or on dedicated web sites like chess.com. Correspondence chess is very fun because it allows for much deeper analysis of the position than traditional OTB play.


I was going to post the same.



Orwell
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25 Nov 2008, 8:38 pm

Ragtime wrote:
Orwell wrote:
I'm 19, and already too old to really learn to play chess at a high level.


Oh, I don't know about that... I'm finding, now that I've re-taken up chess, that I have much more patient slyness than I did back when I was younger and only wanted to win, win, win. Now, I actually enjoy the whole game, and since humans' brains reach maturity at around age 30, I'm finding new mental resources that I didn't have before. (I can also attest that that last part has been true for each year of my twenties.)

I've had the humbling experience of being slaughtered by 8-year-olds too many times.


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