an ordinary chessplayer wrote on 08/06/17 at 12:36:54:
The answer to the question is cut and dried. The OP initially referred to a "representation". Once he clarified that his representation was a pocket set the answer was obvious. RdC quoted the rule in #21, and Stigma gave the reasoning in #52.
In #34 exigentsky showed his cards:
Quote:The posts are in the interest of debate, not productivity.
The reason I called troll is because in a usual debate, we try to bring the other side to our point of view by making reasoned arguments. In this debate, however, the OP seems intent on making the readers
disagree with him. He never addresses any valid point made, unless it is to summarily dismiss it by stating that he already considered it in a previous post. Instead he uses every response as an opportunity to introduce a new outlandish point in the hopes of provoking further responses.
There is no way exigentsky emailed the USCF, but if he did then I will admit that his trolling knows no bounds.
If anything, I'm the one being trolled. Your "revelations" are nothing more than attempts at manipulation by taking comments out of context or ignoring subtleties. It's intellectually dishonest. For instance, the response where I said that some of my posts were in the interest of debate, not productivity was not a suggestion that this issue has no impact on me. It was a response to the following comment:
Quote:Alright exigentsy, the USCF Rules Committee Liaison is Judy Misner. You may contact her via email (jmisner@uschess.org) or by phone (931-787-1234, ext. 126). You could easily have done so with less time than it took you to make all of those long posts in this thread.
I acknowledged that nothing will be known or changed without going through the proper channels (not a chess forum). Still, I saw some value in a deeper understanding of the issue and more philosophical inspection. Despite your incredulity, I've since e-mailed the USCF and was told that it was forwarded to the proper people.
Some of you guys probably played chess longer than I've been alive and are set in your beliefs about how it should be (justified or not - much like religious zealots or dogmatic followers of tradition). I've provided ample support for my arguments throughout this thread but I don't like repeating answers to points I've covered.
Contrary to claims otherwise, I've made a considerable effort to adapt to physical 3D sets (~100 OTB rated games using traditional chess sets, many casual games using 3D sets, 3D sets online, etc.). The fact that I need to repeat this demonstrates how shallowly my posts were read.
I don't see the purpose of forcing people to play via a representation they don't like. Inevitably, most of my chess will be online because it's the quickest way to get casual games with a diverse set of players matched to my rating. The vast majority of training resources such as books, videos, tactical trainers, ChessPub, etc. utilize 2D representations as well.
I don't see fully adapting to a physical 3D set over who knows how many more games as very practical or a worthwhile accomplishment. I'd much rather improve at chess itself rather than merely at utilizing one of its representations. There's no inherent superiority/merit in one or the other and allowing a pocket chess set is a neat solution to provide the most inclusive experience. Disallowing it is a double standard given the precedent set by similarly sized officially sanctioned devices with far more capabilities (and dangers) than just a 2D board representation.
I covered nearly every point made while many of mine were ignored and dismissed offhand with ad hominems (as you're fond of doing). Several responses were little more than restatements of the author's original points (barely addressing my counterpoints). Examples include: the notion that my suggestion would compromise chess's image or that it's somehow necessarily cooler the way it is or even that the analogy to a similarly sized electronic score sheet is invalid (as if people usually keep them in their pockets). Debating this is a symptom of grasping at straws.
Movies don't model OTB tournament chess. They model casual chess in the way that best suits the message they want. They have no concern with accurately representing chess. Occasionally, the board isn't even set-up correctly and the positions are frequently not credible. Chess is just used as a symbol.
I have literally never seen scenes from an OTB tournament in a movie that wasn't specifically about chess. Movies usually just show two people competing intensely over a board at a private location. I don't think I've even seen clocks used, let alone scoresheets or any other chess accessory like a Monroi.
If the movie makers believe adding clocks or something else helps the message, they'll add them and if not, they won't. A lot of creative freedom is taken and the tournament standards don't even enter into the equation. It's also not as if simply allowing something, such as electronic score sheets or a tiny secondary chess set, means that said thing will be universally embraced. Electronic score sheets have been available for more than a decade and are still uncommon.