Sunday, May 28, 2017

Hillel Aloni (30.ix.1937-26/27.v.2017)

A great man has left us.


Dear chessfriends, 

It is with deep sadness to inform you that Hillel Aloni, the composer, player, teacher and the father of endgame study composition in Israel has passed away last Friday, just 4 months before he turned 80. 
He was the mentor of all Israeli study composers and his contribution to the development of our art is invaluable. 
 May he rest in peace. 

                         Kind regards,  Yochanan Afek

(via e-mail)
(1) Posted by Paz Einat [Sunday, May 28, 2017 08:28]

Very sad news from Israel - Hillel Aloni passed away yesterday


The funeral will be held today at his town of residence, Netanya. Our condolences to Yoel (Hillel's twin brother) and his family.
Hillel's contribution to Chess Problem Composition in Israel was huge. Briefly, he is the father of endgame studies in Israel, edited the studies sections in our magazines (Shachmat, Haproblemai & Variantim) and raised so many talented study composers.

The Aloni Jubilee tourney we announced will now, sadly, be: Hillel Aloni Memorial Tourney for studies published in Variantim this year. Prize fund of at least $300, judge Ofer Comay.

Our hearts are with Yoel, Hillel's twin brother. This is a reminder that the #3 problems published in Variantim in 2016-2017 will take part in Yoel Aloni 80 Jubilee Tourney with a prize fund of at least #300.

(via MatPlus Forum)

Friday, May 19, 2017

Thursday, May 11, 2017

20 years ago: Deep Blue defeats Kasparov

The (arguably?) strongest player of the pre-Carlsen era, Garry Kasparov, spectacularly lost his match against the computer Deep Blue when on 11 May 1997 his entire game broke down, leading to one of the most spectacular losses of his career.

For the first time in history, a reigning world chess champion was defeated by a computer in a match with long games.

What followed was an ugly argument between Kasparov and IBM, supposedly Kasparov alleged that IBM did not only have the computer make the moves for the sixth game.
Was Kasparov victim to "a ploy to boost IBM's stock market" (as Wikipedia says a movie made in 2003 suggests), or did we witness the world champion losing fair and square?

IBM published the logs of Deep Blue, and possibly Kasparov fell into a trap he built himself by choosing a weak opening that usually a computer would play horribly. Did the tricks of the world champion fire back, or was he tricked otherwise?

Twenty years later, some questions still are left unanswered.

Saturday, May 6, 2017

Dear Trump protesters...

...I understand very well that Donald Trump is a polarizing personality, and as a supporter of him I also see many of his decisions and opinions critical, especially those that could very well destroy the future of this planet, such as his belief that there is no man-made global warming, and the stupid actions he took on this belief.

There is however one thing you need to understand.

Chess is not part of your problem. If you see people playing chess on the street and you feel like you must demonstrate, leave the chess players alone!

(To everyone else the linked article on ChessBase also might be interesting.)

Monday, April 17, 2017

Announcement: Peter Siegfried Krug 50 JT

(submitted by Mario Guido Garcia)

JT50 PETER S. KRUG

To celebrate the  50th  birthday of Peter Siegfried Krug  a composing tourney for endgame studies is announced.  -Theme: free – In two sections : A Studies Win –   B Studies Draw –  Maximum 3 entries are allowed in each section Judge: Peter S. Krug  – Send your original entries to director: Mario G. García   by e-mail to:  marioggarcia@ gmail.com   Prizes , honourable mentions , commendations and special nominations will be awarded.- The provisional award will be issued in December   2017,   will be sent-to-participants-by-e-mail , and may see in the websites of ARVES and UAPA –  Closing date: september 30 , 2017

Saturday, April 15, 2017

Robert William Taylor (10.ii.1932 - 13.iv.2017)

The mathematical engineer Robert W. Taylor, who lead the invention of the single one technology that shaped the modern world - the internet, or rather its predecessor ARPAnet - has died at the age of 85. Coming generations will praise him as a hero of free speech and the exchange of information in a time when western countries were not yet dictatorships, when people still were able to freely access and exchange informations before their falling leaders, those who are as bad as the nazis, as the stalinists, forbade it.