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| Tags: arpad, chess, elo, past, players, present, rating, reprintedtoday |
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#1
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Elo's book, The Rating of Chess Players, Past and Present, is
reprinted today. http://www.amazon.com/dp/0923891277 Professor Elo's book, long out of print and almost impossible to obtain, has just been reprinted. Sam Sloan |
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#2
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I spent half an hour on the phone this week interviewing someone who wants
to bring chess ratings into the C21st, and who will additionally provide Chessville with 4 articles on the subject. He operates an outfit in competition to 'standard' ratings, but is still true to Elo - in fact more true than those systems which use ratings floors and ceilings. Phil Innes "samsloan" wrote in message ... Elo's book, The Rating of Chess Players, Past and Present, is reprinted today. http://www.amazon.com/dp/0923891277 Professor Elo's book, long out of print and almost impossible to obtain, has just been reprinted. Sam Sloan |
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#3
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On Fri, 9 May 2008 13:40:02 -0400, "Chess One"
wrote: I spent half an hour on the phone this week interviewing someone who wants to bring chess ratings into the C21st, and who will additionally provide Chessville with 4 articles on the subject. He operates an outfit in competition to 'standard' ratings, but is still true to Elo - in fact more true than those systems which use ratings floors and ceilings. Phil Innes So his system cuts sandbaggers and manipulators a little more slack? |
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#4
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On May 9, 3:29 pm, Mike Murray wrote:
On Fri, 9 May 2008 13:40:02 -0400, "Chess One" wrote: I spent half an hour on the phone this week interviewing someone who wants to bring chess ratings into the C21st, and who will additionally provide Chessville with 4 articles on the subject. He operates an outfit in competition to 'standard' ratings, but is still true to Elo - in fact more true than those systems which use ratings floors and ceilings. Phil Innes So his system cuts sandbaggers and manipulators a little more slack? Yes it is probably that Chess Express nonsense he has been touting for some time now. |
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#5
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On May 9, 4:29 pm, Mike Murray wrote:
I spent half an hour on the phone this week interviewing someone who wants to bring chess ratings into the C21st, and who will additionally provide Chessville with 4 articles on the subject. He operates an outfit in competition to 'standard' ratings, but is still true to Elo - in fact more true than those systems which use ratings floors and ceilings. Phil Innes So his system cuts sandbaggers and manipulators a little more slack? Let's not forget that there are "lifetime sandbaggers" as well. When I first started playing in rated tourneys, I noticed that the winner of our state's Reserve section sounded strangely familiar. It turned out that he was deliberately staying below the cutoff point, so he could win, year after year, thereby becoming world- famous like Sam Sloan. No amount of quibbling over K-factors or ratings floors or ceilings can impede these "lifers". And in addition to American "lifers", there are of course more than a few foreigners who travel to play in our "big money" tournaments, year after year. These folks know that if they stay below certain cutoffs, they will end up the richer for it, financially anyway. Fortunately, the amount of devotion to duty and determination to lose -- sometimes -- and never having the ambition to become a Class A player like me, is rare, so these "lifers" are /relatively/ few and far between. One item which seems to be of interest is the mathematical advantage of having the first move in a game of chess. If this edge were found to be almost identical at every level, it should be an easy matter to implement a change in the ratings system to more accurately reflect the fact that I have been given 62.147% Blacks and only 36.853 Whites (the other 1% of the time I was forced to play with red or green pieces, and I hung my Queen as a direct result). Apparently as the result of some fairly recent ratings deflation, a lot of folks are now on their rating floors. What can be done about this? Is it merely superficial, allowing such players to "save face" when in fact their /real/ ratings are tracked and used for calculating all ratings changes? I, of course, wouldn't know about such things, since I am never on any floor and am always breaking through ceilings (ahem). -- help bot |
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#6
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On Fri, 9 May 2008 14:09:33 -0700 (PDT), help bot
wrote: Apparently as the result of some fairly recent ratings deflation, a lot of folks are now on their rating floors. What can be done about this? Is it merely superficial, allowing such players to "save face" when in fact their /real/ ratings are tracked and used for calculating all ratings changes? I asked this question myself some time ago, and was told that the floor IS the real rating -- there is no unpublished rating which reflects "real" strength and is used for calculating the results of others. |
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#7
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On May 9, 12:54*pm, samsloan wrote:
Elo's book, The Rating of Chess Players, Past and Present, is reprinted today. http://www.amazon.com/dp/0923891277 Professor Elo's book, long out of print and almost impossible to obtain, has just been reprinted. Sam Sloan I'm still wondering if this book is in the public domain at this time. It was first published in 1978, just 30 years ago. What is the length of copyright for such works? |
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#8
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wrote: On May 9, 12:54�pm, samsloan wrote: Elo's book, The Rating of Chess Players, Past and Present, is reprinted today. http://www.amazon.com/dp/0923891277 Professor Elo's book, long out of print and almost impossible to obtain, has just been reprinted. Sam Sloan I'm still wondering if this book is in the public domain at this time. It was first published in 1978, just 30 years ago. What is the length of copyright for such works? If the intitial copyright date was 1978 or later, author's life plus 70 years. If it was pre-1978, 95 years after the start of copyright. Unless the copyright holder voluntarily put it in public domain (possible, I suppose, since I doubt Elo was in it for the money), or Sloan obtained permission from the copyright holder, he's violating the law. However, it would be up to whoever currently owns the copyright to raise the matter. |
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#9
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On May 9, 5:48 pm, wrote:
On May 9, 12:54 pm, samsloan wrote: Elo's book, The Rating of Chess Players, Past and Present, is reprinted today. http://www.amazon.com/dp/0923891277 Professor Elo's book, long out of print and almost impossible to obtain, has just been reprinted. Sam Sloan I'm still wondering if this book is in the public domain at this time. It was first published in 1978, just 30 years ago. What is the length of copyright for such works? And, unless I am mistaken, it was published in a second edition in 1987. |
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#10
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schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... On May 9, 12:54 pm, samsloan wrote: Elo's book, The Rating of Chess Players, Past and Present, is reprinted today. http://www.amazon.com/dp/0923891277 Professor Elo's book, long out of print and almost impossible to obtain, has just been reprinted. Sam Sloan I'm still wondering if this book is in the public domain at this time. It was first published in 1978, just 30 years ago. What is the length of copyright for such works? Elo died in 1992, so most likely the copyright runs until 2062. The book was originally published in 1978 by 'Arco', which seems to be a vanity label. If you google you find a reference to a 1979 edition by Batsford. It is possible, therefore, that Batsford owns the copyright; also possible that Elo's heirs own it. It is pretty much certain that Sloan doesn't own the rights to this nor to most of the other nonsense he is reprinting. The book itself isn't very interesting, because Elo stretches his point and doesn't have a solid grasp of statistical logic. However, the basic method, which is elementary, is well described in this book and also in 2 papers published earlier. What Sloan means when he says he is 'sending the book to the printers' is that he is sending a CD with the page images to Amazon. Amazon then runs off a copy and glues it together *after* somebody orders it. They don't seem to be very concerned about copyright ownership; However, Sloan does have to state that he owns the rights. Presumably then Amazon is in the clear and it is Sloan who will get sued if the owner takes notice and thinks it is worthwhile. Another aspect of Sloan's current scam is that he seems to have no inhibitions about copying cover artwork for the pirated reprints. This may well be under separate copyright. |
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