Archive for the ‘Chess’ Category

Make Way for the Queens of Chess – The Wall Street Journal

This month 10 of the best young female chess players in the country will compete in St. Louis for the title of U.S. Girls Junior Champion. It is the first in-person national championship among girls since the pandemic moved American chess online in early 2020. It is also the first such championship since the premiere of The Queens Gambit, the Netflix hit series about an orphan girl, Beth Harmon, partly based on American chess champ Bobby Fischer, who rises to the pinnacle of the chess world.

The tournament marks a transition point between Americansespecially American girls and womenand chess. Nearly half a century ago, Fischers Cold War shootout with the Soviet Unions Boris Spassky ignited American passion for the game. But the Fischer phenomenon didnt include women. Fischer even asserted in 1962 that women are terrible chess players and shouldnt be involved in intellectual affairs.

The recent chess boom has brought new players to the game, and a higher percentage of women have been playing on chess.com since the debut of The Queens Gambit. Sales of chess sets have grown, as have the number of games played online, with millions of new members signing up.

Now, with life starting to return to normal, will interest in chess fade? And, in particular, will it fade for women and girls?

I think not. What we are witnessing is anything but a fad.

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Make Way for the Queens of Chess - The Wall Street Journal

Anand Beats Kramnik In No Castling Match – Chess.com

GM Viswanathan Anand defeated GM Vladimir Kramnik 2.5-1.5 in a four-game No Castling chess match in Dortmund, Germany. Anand's win in the first game was decisive in this event where the players were not allowed to castle.

The idea for this match originates from DeepMind's latest paper, co-written by Kramnik, in which the self-learning chess engine AlphaZero was used to explore the design of different variants of the game of chess with different sets of rules. One of the variants discussedmany of which you can try on Chess.com yourself!was No Castling. DeepMind also supported the match between Anand and Kramnik and plans to sponsor the event next year as well.

The match saw all four games starting with 1.c4, with Black responding 1...c5 in the first three before Anand tried a Tarrasch setup in game four. There was a lot of exciting chess, but the first game turned out to be the decisive one.

All games

The match was part of the annual chess festival in Dortmund, which has been held annually since 1973 and was only skipped last year due to the pandemic. There was also a closed tournament this year called the "Deutschland Grand Prix." The winner was GM Pavel Eljanov with 6/9.

Final Standings

All games

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Anand Beats Kramnik In No Castling Match - Chess.com

Star Trek 3D chess and more out-of-this-world ways to celebrate International Chess Day – ZDNet

July 20 is International Chess Day (also called World Chess Day by the United Nations). In honor of the holiday, the folks at The Noble Collection asked me if I wanted to review the Star Trek chess set. Sometimes my job is really cool.

In the accompanying video, you can see the entire chess set in action. It's actually a lot nicer than I expected. I wasn't entirely sure what to expect, but I guess I figured it would be some kid's toy. It's not. It has much more of a collectable quality. Watch the video. You'll see.

More to the point, though, I got to thinking about what July 20th really means to me. On July 20th in 1969, human beings stepped out onto the moon's surface for the first time. I was a little boy way back then, watching on an old black and white Zenith TV.

I've often wondered how Michael Collins felt. He stayed in the command module, orbiting the moon, while Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin went down to the surface. On the one hand, he was a critical part of the crew of Apollo 11. On the other hand, he got so close but never made it onto the moon's surface.

While I was putting the video together, I thought a lot about the relationship between the original Star Trek series and the real-world space program.

The first episode of Star Trek aired on Sept. 8, 1966. Gene Roddenberry had actually started writing his treatment (basically, a concept document) for Star Trek on March 11, 1964. Think about that date.

The last crewed Mercury flight (which launched just one astronaut into space at a time) launched on May 15, 1963, with Gordon Cooper in the cockpit. Cooper was an aeronautical engineer and an Air Force test pilot. He was also the youngest of the Mercury astronauts.

Roddenberry penned the basic concepts for Star Trek after Mercury but before Gemini (the missions with two astronauts in the cockpit). The Enterprise was originally called the Yorktown in his treatment. The original pilot, "The Cage", was filmed in 1964 as well. That pilot didn't make it into production, but some of the characters we've now come to know and love in Star Trek Discovery were defined back then, including Captain Pike, Number One, and, of course, Mr Spock.

The original Star Trek series was picked up by Desilu Productions, at the time a leading independent TV production firm.

Fun fact: Desilu was named after its owners and founders, Desi Arnaz and Lucille Ball. Yep, that Lucy and Desi. As the story goes, Lucy was actually the person who greenlit Star Trek, believing it would have life in this concept she had, called syndication. Back then, reruns and syndication weren't the juggernauts they became. Lucy not only enabled Star Trekbut pioneered the entire concept of second-run TV shows.

As hard as it is to believe now, that first Star Trek show with Kirk, Spock, and McCoy wasn't a huge success. After ratings dropped, it was cancelled. The last episode aired on June 3, 1969 -- about a month and a half before Armstrong and Aldrin walked on the moon.

As I edited the video, my thoughts took me along two paths. The first, of course, was that all that went into the original series ranging from Klingons to teleporters, from handheld communicators to automatic sliding doors -- preceded the very first moon landing. Contrary to popular legend, the communicator did not inspire the cell phone. Mobile phones were under development before that time. But it was still cool.

My other path of thinking was just how well some of the original plot devices in Star Trek TOS have held up over time. If you've watched the subsequent series, whether The Next Generation or Discovery, it's interesting to see just how much of the basic foundational mythos of Star Trek was put into practice in that original series.

Next, I want to loop in some space and chess-related TV recommendations, in no particular order. The next season of the animatedStar TrekseriesLower Deckspremieres in three weeks, on August 12.

I've been watching the Apple TV+ seriesFor All Mankind. It's an alternate history version of the space program where Armstrong and Aldrin landed after the Russians. I got Apple TV+ for freewhen I bought an inexpensive iPad, but I'd pay the $4.99 a month just to watch this series. It's tight and can be very suspenseful in places.

It also spotlights some of the unsung roles women played in America's early space program, including the Mercury 13. Most people don't know that 13 exceptional female pilots were trained to be astronauts along with the men for that mission. A character in the show, Molly Cobb, is based largely on Jerrie Cobb, a truly amazing woman who never made it into space but was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize for her very dangerous work flying supplies to indigenous tribes in South America.

Be forewarned,For All Mankindis kind of likeGame of Thronesin space, wherebadthings always happen.For All Mankindgets very, very dark. But it's still a very cool series.

Let's loop back to chess. If you haven't watchedThe Queen's Gambiton Netflix, you're missing a great show. I avoided it for the longest time because the idea of a series around chess seemed like it might be pretty tedious, but some of my friends raved about it. So, my wife and I watched it together, and I must admit, it was riveting. Well worth your time.

And with that, I'll sign out for now. Have a happy International Chess Day/ Moon Landing Anniversary. If you've watched any of these shows or have any cool Star Trek props or stories, please feel free to share in the comments below.

And what about the 3D chess set I reviewed? Do you plan on getting one? What about giving one as a holiday gift? The comments are there for you to let us know.

You can follow my day-to-day project updates on social media. Be sure to follow me on Twitter at @DavidGewirtz, on Facebook at Facebook.com/DavidGewirtz, on Instagram at Instagram.com/DavidGewirtz, and on YouTube at YouTube.com/DavidGewirtzTV.

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Star Trek 3D chess and more out-of-this-world ways to celebrate International Chess Day - ZDNet

How the game of Chess has helped mold Oregon’s Kayvon Thibodeaux – Yahoo Sports

How the game of Chess has helped mold Oregon's Kayvon Thibodeaux originally appeared on NBC Sports Northwest

Chess is a thinking man's game. It can take years and yeasr to perfect, and even then it's no easy game.

For Oregon's Kayvon Thibodeaux, it wasthis mental challenge that drew him to the classic board game.

Thibodeaux talked about it on the latest edition of Talkin' Ducks.

Listen to the latest Talkin Ducks Podcast!]

Chess is the game of life

Kayvon Thibodeaux

When you think about it, it's really true.

Let's just think about football:

-Pawns are likeyour linemen, up front, leading the charge, laying out a line of protection.

- Bishops and Rooks are like WRs and TE, running routes and doing big damage.

- Knights are your running backs. They run in short burst and cut for small chunks of yards.

- The Queen is your quarterback. The most dangerous pieces on the board.

- The King, it all starts and ends withhim. That's you, head coach.

Of course, a fun little football analogy isn't all Thibodeaux may have been alluding to. He was talking about life in general. Friends, family, loved ones - each pieces plays an intergral part on the board.

"Once you realize it shows you how to move life and how certain people in your life correlate with certain pieces on the chessboard and you know [how to be] stategic and how you can set things up... it's one of those wisdom things."

Link:
How the game of Chess has helped mold Oregon's Kayvon Thibodeaux - Yahoo Sports

World Chess Day: Watch the making of the largest king piece – Telangana Today

The chess piece which is 53 times the size of a standard Champion Staunton king piece, is constructed of Sapele African Hardwood and Wood Glue.

This World Chess Day, we take a look back at how the largest chess piece ever was built. The structure also made to the Guiness World Record.

The king piece which measures 6.09 m (20 ft) tall and 2.79 m (9 ft 2 in) in diameter at its base, was achieved by World Chess Museum, Inc. DBA World Chess Hall of Fame (USA) in Saint Louis, Missouri, USA, on 6 April 2018.

The chess piece which is 53 times the size of a standard Champion Staunton king piece, is constructed of Sapele African Hardwood and Wood Glue. It was assembled into oversize rough blocks then sculpted using wood working tools.

Wondering how this could happen? Watch the time-lapse video of the giant king piece being assembled:

Video courtesy: Guinness World Record

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World Chess Day: Watch the making of the largest king piece - Telangana Today