For me another shitty day in paradise.
Any chance for me to get a stronger Mark V with much more Mhz?

Greetings
Moderators: hgm, Dann Corbit, Harvey Williamson
This is a disappointing attitude. It's an amazing accomplishment that Franz has managed to bring these old machines back to life. Incredible. They were stand alone chess computers, not engines. They were intended to play chess, not present analysis and evaluations. Yet you want the recreations to offer features the original programmers didn't, how does that even make sense? For the comparitively simple Sargon 1978 project, I was surprised and happy when I realised I could actually present the PV and evaluation. But it was really only a stroke of good luck, and possible only because I had the full source code for the program, with the author's best efforts to explain everything in comments. Plus it was a small (old, weak) program. Franz faced a much more serious challenge with a bare ROM as opposed to fully commented source. And he has succeeded 250 times over!Thomas Lagershausen wrote: ↑Sat May 30, 2020 5:12 pmToday in the game 2 of my match against Mark V i used Mess and the preconfiguration of Arena GUI.
I am missing any informationoutput of Mark V under this configuration. No evaluation of the position, no mainline, absolut nothing.
Is this right?
Please give me more data under Arena GUI .
+1 Remarkable, indeed.Bill Forster wrote: ↑Sun May 31, 2020 1:36 amThis is a disappointing attitude. It's an amazing accomplishment that Franz has managed to bring these old machines back to life. Incredible. They were stand alone chess computers, not engines. They were intended to play chess, not present analysis and evaluations. Yet you want the recreations to offer features the original programmers didn't, how does that even make sense? For the comparitively simple Sargon 1978 project, I was surprised and happy when I realised I could actually present the PV and evaluation. But it was really only a stroke of good luck, and possible only because I had the full source code for the program, with the author's best efforts to explain everything in comments. Plus it was a small (old, weak) program. Franz faced a much more serious challenge with a bare ROM as opposed to fully commented source. And he has succeeded 250 times over!Thomas Lagershausen wrote: ↑Sat May 30, 2020 5:12 pmToday in the game 2 of my match against Mark V i used Mess and the preconfiguration of Arena GUI.
I am missing any informationoutput of Mark V under this configuration. No evaluation of the position, no mainline, absolut nothing.
Is this right?
Please give me more data under Arena GUI .
Has anyone tried these autosensory boards? How do they compare to the DGT boards? Is support (warranty and otherwise) good? Is there a US distributor?mephisto wrote: ↑Sat May 30, 2020 8:02 pmIf you want to play on a full size wooden electronic chess board against all the old chess computers found in Franz excellent software package then head over to the Certabo website.
Their latest software includes MessChess that enables you to use all the chess computers ROMS.
https://www.certabo.com/download/
Thank you Franz. I hadn't downloaded this for a couple of years so it was good to get an update. I don't recall my earlier version having the auto link to Arena built in which makes controlling some of the engines much easier and is a big improvement.F.Huber wrote: ↑Fri May 29, 2020 5:16 pmHi,
you can use more than 250 old chess computer programs (also MK V) with CB-Emu_Pro from my website:
https://fhub.jimdofree.com/
It also includes a special version 'MessChess' which allows to run all those programs in any
chess GUI which supports the WB or UCI protocol (e.g. WinBoard, Arena, Hiarcs, Shredder, ...)
Regards,
Franz
Yes, that's a great website, and for using these old chess computers it's indeed necessary to have the manual, because it's impossible to know or remember all the functions or settings of so many machines.GONeill wrote: ↑Sun May 31, 2020 11:37 pmI looked through my old links and was pleased to find that Alain's User Manuals page is still around too, and seems to be quite active in updating the list of computers covered:
http://www.zanchetta.net/ under "Chess Computers" > "Documentations".
Well, that would blow up my CB-Emu package from 150 to about 900 MB - no way!It would be great if you could coordinate with him and include a folder in your download with the manuals of the computers that you have emulated.
Well, a bit more would be possible, but not much more.Thomas Lagershausen wrote: ↑Mon Jun 01, 2020 7:17 amI try it again, because it is important for me.
Any chance to get a Mark V with much more MHz?