drkodos wrote on 01/06/09 at 04:34:06:
Monroi device does not connect to the internet. It can transmit to a "hub" but it does not recieve.
My thinking is that it would be easier (and cheaper!) to compromise many other devices and find much easier ways to cheat than gutting a monroi and rebuilding it as a chess computer capable of recieving.
Thank god we play in good old europe and don´t have to spend 360 $ on a device that does the job of the combo pencil & sheet of paper!
Even if cost would come down I cannot see why I should use this gadget.
I doubt that it is much faster than writing down moves, because you still have to record your moves manually.
As I am gifted by an average writing I can still read my notes after the game.
I have to put the moves manually into chessbase again, but this is part of my post mortem routine anyway (first I try to enter the moves and my thoughts during the game, afterwards I try to analyse the game and only then I turn on the engine to see what I have missed).
Only tournament organizers should benefit from the use of Monroi, as they get pgn data from every game, which might be sold afterwards to participants or even database providers. As the record of play belongs to them according to FIDE regulations, they should provide players with a Monroi, if they want them to use one.
On topic I wouldn´t be too concerned about cheating with a Monroi. The cheating player could be detected easily if someone watches him as he enters the move. The risk looks far too great. If a third person wants to transmit moves to a player he still would have to watch the game for knowing when to transmit. I guess other ways of cheating are cheaper and harder to detect.