MNb wrote on 12/31/07 at 15:51:04:
Technology in Formula 1 plays a relatively more important role than say in marathon.
The same for corr chess compared to otb.
ICCF ratings are a good measure of ones skill at corr chess, nothing more. No corr player ever has stated something else. Nothing controversial here.
So it is wrong to compare ICCF-rating with FIDE-rating, but there is something else. Ratings are by definition relative, a FIDE-rating of 2700 in 2008 already is completely different from this rating in 1978. So the FIDE-rating does not tell us much about individual skills either, only relatively to others in the same statistical group. If I tell you that I have a Surinamese rating of 2070 you don't know anything yet. Not for the first time I feel that TN treats rating as an absolute standard, which is as misleading as comparing FIDE-rating with ICCF-rating.
Again nothing controversial. Even Ender's statement that corr chess is amoral is not controversial - it is just nonsense.
Formula 1 Racing and a Marathon are two distinctly different things, there is no connection between them, so again I say its a bad analogy. Nevertheless I think I get what your'e trying to drive at (sort of), no pun intended.
Mnb said: So it is wrong to compare ICCF-rating with FIDE-rating.
Yes it is wrong, and although ICCF ratings should not be compared with OTB ones, many do exactly this. Better keep your CC database and other Databases seperate or searches based on ratings will be severely skewed.
Mnb - So the FIDE-rating does not tell us much about individual skills either, only relatively to others in the same statistical group.
The above statement is only partly true. It is true to say Fide ratings are comparative to those in a statisical group. However it is not true to say that a Fide rating does not tell us much, it is not perfect but it tells quite a bit when one considers that Fide is the world body for chess employing a rating system used to measure the performance of the World's best players along with all those who participate in their events.
Fide rated players do not simply represent a random, small, statistical group, it is the bench mark for performance for any serious chess player and is not to be compared with National or other Ratings which I agree with you often tells us nothing about a player's strength unless there is some Fide approximation built in, surely you know this.
A 2300 Fide rated player in Surinam should be around the same playing strength more or less as a 2300 rated player in USA. When a player that follows chess at any kind of serious level, sees a Fide Rating of 2200, 2300, 2400, 2500, 2600 they automatically have an idea as to the general strength of that player, the same is not true when one sees for example a rating of USCF 2400, and when such ratings are posted on ICC for instance, the first question from Kibitzers is what does that translate to in Fide Elo terms.
Mnb, your attempt to trivialise the importance of Fide ratings, and not for the first time, suggests to me that you have some personal aversion to them.
The Fide rating system or elo as it is popularly known, is not perfect by any means, but it is what it is. Respect it.
Mnb wrote: Even Ender's statement that corr chess is amoral is not controversial - it is just nonsense.
I think what Ender meant is that the widespread use of analysis engines and other forms of aid, particularly when it is unsanctioned in a sporting event is amoral. Sadly there are some players who seem quite unable to play a decent game of chess without assisstance of some kind, and while there is nothing wrong with that, I don't think such persons should be awarded titles that suggest mastery of the game. Once again I am probably alone in this view.
Tops