While most of us can slide a few pieces across the board as if trying to dodge rickshaws in a crowded Indian market, not many would know the difference between Queen’s English and Queen’s Pawn Openings. To learn about that you can go to www.princeton.edu/~jedwards/cif/chess.html, a site that can teach you basic as well advanced strategies for all pieces. Then there is the Internet Chess Club at www.chessclub.com. A good site, but this is a paid site — $ 49 per annum — and, thus, may not be suitable for Indians without credit cards. The organisation whose championship our boy won, the World Chess Federation, can be accessed at www.fide.com. You can view the famous games played, get news and other information on chess, see photos of events, or get a calendar of chess happenings scheduled. Chess is a game with a rich history, in which India is believed to have the role of the place of birth. To learn more on this and the variants of the game, you check out www.chessvariants.com. You will find a description of Chaturanga, the oldest known form of chess, played in India in or before the 7th century after Christ. While we are at it, you can may also like refresh your memory of how Deep Blue, the famous IBM computer, beat Garry Kasparov, in a six-game rematch in May 1997. You can do that at www.research.ibm.com/ deepblue/home/html/b.html. There are commentaries on the match by experts, including Viswanathan, as well as the technologies involved in the whole affair. By the time you have taken a peek at
these sites, you would surely sound like a heavyweight, if not play like
one. Also, in the process you would come across a whole lot of other
interesting links — sites on the game are by the thousand. |
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