This is multiple choice poll to see which factors chesstalk viewers speculate might be promising for growing Canadian organized chess by the end of the 21st century.
What's promising for growing Canadian organized chess by 2100 AD?
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What's promising for growing Canadian organized chess by 2100 AD?
20Chess coaching and instruction20.00%4Junior chess15.00%3Playing by Internet or email5.00%1Organizing partly or entirely by Internet or email10.00%2Chess software0.00%0Elite Canadian or international players10.00%2The CMA20.00%4The CFC10.00%2Nothing0.00%0Something else10.00%2Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace EngineerTags: None
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Re: What's promising for growing Canadian organized chess by 2100 AD?
In your poll, internet or email should be separate items.
My idea of internet would be a server where the CFC or a TD would enter players names, the time controls for the event, etc. and the games would be played in real time over a couple of hours or whatever. Ratings would be updated immediately and it wouldn't matter if it was in a separate category for the internet chess.
In addition, all a TD would have to do is enter his completed over the board event into the server administration function and the ratings would be immediately updated for whichever speed category the event was played.
Email will always be correspondence chess and the ICCF has a really nice server which both they ICCF and national federations use for their events. I think Germany also has a server for CC at least but I've never used it so don't know how smooth it works.
Don't look for it anytime soon.Gary Ruben
CC - IA and SIM
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Re: What's promising for growing Canadian organized chess by 2100 AD?
I wished I had more than a 10 options max. poll possible. I lumped in email chess with Internet chess because of that, and because they are both modern ways that people might pick up playing chess (some folks might play by email for fun, as opposed to formal correspondence games), perhaps to move on to over-the-board chess, where I think the bulk of organized chess as we know it occurs.
A CFC Internet server, as you say Gary, seems unlikely to happen soon. Nor does even a modest increase in membership dues, nor substantial loans for chess development from the Foundation. For those reasons and others, besides my gut feeling, I don't have much confidence in the CFC as a promising factor for growing organized chess in Canada much, even in 86 years time.Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace Engineer
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Re: What's promising for growing Canadian organized chess by 2100 AD?
Originally posted by David Gordon View PostChess will be dead by the year 2100AD
Btw, I first took out a CFC membership fourty years ago in 1974, so I have some experience with how little many things can seem to change over decades, at least. I may be wrong, but I recall the CFC had a higher membership then (or at least some few years later) than it does now.Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace Engineer
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Re: What's promising for growing Canadian organized chess by 2100 AD?
I thought of choosing 2050 AD (instead of 2100), but that's less than 40 years from now. As I posted previously, I've seen 40 years pass and not much changed in Canadian chess in a lastingly positive way as far as growing organized chess went.
Not only that, but many of the factors affecting possible growth are not new. I listed what I thought were the most significant ones in the poll options, including modern ones like the Internet, and the not-so-modern ones like the CMA.
I recall someone theorizing that the 21st century would be like ten 20th centuries rolled into 100 years as far as technical etc. progress are concerned, in all significant fields of endeavour. I don't think the last 14 years justifies this prediction. If anything there are many tendencies globally that are retarding positive progress (where and if there can be such a thing, such as in medicine - leaving out greedy pharmacutical [sp?] companies, for example), and some of these tendencies are nothing short of evil.
[edit:Here's a link to an outline of the 21st century as it has unfolded so far, which includes descriptions of progress made in various fields, as well as of social issues etc.:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/21st_century
]Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace Engineer
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Re: What's promising for growing Canadian organized chess by 2100 AD?
I added a link to my previous post, and am bumping up this poll thread as well in case folks may have missed it.
Note that the final option in the poll ("Something else") is an option not intended to exclude the other poll options necessarily (unlike the second last option, namely "Nothing"). This last option is useful in case anyone thinks there may be one or more 'X factors' that can't be foreseen, but that the sum of all possible such X factors is on the whole promising for growing Canadian organized chess. It could also include such imagined events, over time, as the federal government and/or a wealthy individual(s) or corporation(s) being a benefactor for Canadian chess in some way (not necessarily by donating to the CFC). Or FIDE becoming so well off that it fosters chess in Canada to a greater extent than is now feasible or probable. Or maybe even the CFC being replaced by a new organization (other than the CMA, perhaps).
Otherwise, I think many chesstalk viewers might agree that the poll includes important factors which are given explicitly that may promise to grow organized adult chess (let alone junior chess) in Canada (some folks may put their faith in the CFC or even the CMA for this, at least in the long run). The exact measures that best promise to grow organized adult chess may not be so clear, or may not be widely agreed upon, however. Viewers are welcome to post their suggested measures.Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace Engineer
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Re: What's promising for growing Canadian organized chess by 2100 AD?
'Growing Canadian organized chess' could include a having a significantly greater CFC membership. I don't think most would call having 3000 CFC members special (we've been there before), but, having say, 10,000 would be. That's if the CFC is still around in 2100 AD. It might be some other organization, such as the CMA, that takes over by then. There also may be almost nothing but junior chess in 2100. The poll options are meant to be suggestive of what could be 'promising'.Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace Engineer
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Re: What's promising for growing Canadian organized chess by 2100 AD?
Originally posted by Kevin Pacey View Post'Growing Canadian organized chess' could include a having a significantly greater CFC membership. I don't think most would call having 3000 CFC members special (we've been there before), but, having say, 10,000 would be. That's if the CFC is still around in 2100 AD. It might be some other organization, such as the CMA, that takes over by then. There also may be almost nothing but junior chess in 2100. The poll options are meant to be suggestive of what could be 'promising'.
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