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387:. These players have always been considered notable enough for articles. I have tried to make sure that we have articles for all the Norwegian grandmasters (and for the more recent Norwegian national champions as well), and I think we have complete coverage of all the American and English grandmasters too. But we are missing articles on many Russian grandmasters for example. It really is a function of whether any editor wants to take the time it is to create the biographies. For the top flight of players, those over 2700 in rating, I think our coverage is quite comprehensive. This does not mean the articles couldn't be improved, but at least the players at that level have biographies. 274: 259: 535: 172: 128: 118: 233: 44: 138: 98: 148: 108: 222: 38:
operates independently of other WikiProjects, although the project would theoretically be a child of WikiProject Board and Table Games (interviewed in 2011). WikiProject Chess provides a collection of resources, seeks missing photographs of chess players, and helps determine ways that Knowledge (XXG)'s coverage of chess can be expanded.
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The contributors at the WikiProject have generally been friendly and helpful, willing to discuss things. We do sometimes discuss how to coordinate articles and sometimes concerns over notability are aired there before an AFD nomination is made. I am generally an individual editor on articles, but I
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The chess literature on strategy is overwhelmingly devoted to openings, and we have a large number of articles related to different chess openings. Sometimes an excited user decides to write up an article on an extremally obscure opening, but there the line is usually drawn. There are some articles
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I haven't participated in this process, but I remember that there were serious challenges to the FA statuses in 2006 and 2010 where some work had to be done with it. There have also been people who want to add much more, and in most editors' views excessive, coverage of India's role in the history
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Checkmate! — WikiProject Chess: When we challenged the masters of WikiProject Chess to an interview, Sjakkalle answered our call. WikiProject Chess dates back to December 2003 and has grown to include 4 Featured Articles and 15 Good Articles maintained by over 100 members. The project typically
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article was the main issue) in an arbitration case in 2009, in that case ending with a one-year ban of the editor in question for rather extreme personal attacks and other misconduct. Those were unpleasant cases, but I am glad that the members of the WikiProject supported each other through
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answered our call. WikiProject Chess dates back to December 2003 and has grown to include 4 Featured Articles and 15 Good Articles maintained by over 100 members. The project typically operates independently of other WikiProjects, although the project would theoretically be a child of
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I think we face many of the same challenges in acquiring images as many other editors face. For many grandmasters we do have portraits though. When reading about chess though, most people are interested in the moves and the positions rather than the faces of the players. The
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is relatively poorly covered in literature, and that may account for the rather sparse coverage we have there. It is actually a very broad subject, but with a multitude of disparate items, and the subject itself has diffuse edges with openings and
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The chess article is reasonably stable because the rules, strategy, and cultural aspects are fairly constant. What does need updating from time to time is who is in the World top right now. For instance there was a milestone this month when
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I must admit that I am only semi-active with chess articles right now and perhaps not all that up to date with things. Chess is probably the most studied game ever, and there is a wealth of literature for those who want to research
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know others have worked together for improvements. We are individual editors, and sometimes there are disagreements between us, but in the vast majority of cases those differences are settled in an atmosphere of mutual respect.
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I started working on chess articles shortly after I joined Knowledge (XXG) in 2004/2005. At the time, there were a number of good chess-related articles, but many were underdeveloped and many significant topics lacked articles
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The most essential topics have articles now, but there are many articles that are stubs and in need of improvement. As mentioned above, and as seen on the Articles to Create section of
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Are there any gaps in Knowledge (XXG)'s coverage of chess's history, strategy, or notable players? Are any countries or generations better represented than others?
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we are missing articles on a number of notable players. Any new contributor who wants to make one or more of these will be a most welcome addition to the project.
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How difficult has it been to acquire images for chess articles? Aside from photography, what options do editors have when trying to illustrate chess articles?
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At times we have faced editors who decide to make war with the members of the Chess WikiProject. One of them became a side issue (the non-chess related
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are very well covered. We are not as good on the non-theoretical but more strategic endgames, we are missing articles on general concepts such as
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What motivated you to join WikiProject Chess? Do you play competitively? Have you contributed to any of the project's Featured or Good Articles?
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How would you describe the sense of community at WikiProject Chess? Do editors tend to work in concerted efforts or alone in their own niche?
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I have unfortunately not made any major contributions up to Good or Featured status on the English Knowledge (XXG). It is editors such as
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template for illustrating positions is very heavily used in our articles and very important for illustrating the articles.
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I am an active tournament player, of middling strength, although with a rather high (possibly inflated) FIDE
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Submit your project's news and announcements for next week's WikiProject Report at the
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What are WikiProject Chess's most urgent needs? How can a new contributor help today?
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Many of the theoretical endgames, where perfect play can be found in literature and
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in search of a great place to live. Until then, search for Viking loot in the
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became the World's highest rated player in the history of the rating system.
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of 1944. I am also quite active in the local chess club on
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Next week, we'll take the northern way through Europe's
632: 625: 605: 630:If your comment has not appeared here, you can try 650:and plan to put out social media publicizing it. 348:who have done an admirable job in achieving that. 28:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Chess in The Signpost 8: 277:Chess articles by quality from 2007 to 2011 191:January Copyedit Backlog Elimination Drive 741:Knowledge (XXG) Signpost archives 2013-01 272: 257: 243: 231: 220: 18:Knowledge (XXG):Knowledge (XXG) Signpost 633: 609: 383:We are missing articles on a number of 78: 353:WikiProject Chess's primary article, 36: 7: 306:missing photographs of chess players 197:January Articles for Creation Drive 281:When we challenged the masters of 64: 35: 615:These comments are automatically 418:Rook and pawn versus rook endgame 294:WikiProject Board and Table Games 489:Anything else you'd like to add? 300:). WikiProject Chess provides a 146: 136: 126: 116: 106: 96: 690:: doing it for free since 2005. 424:beyond the general coverage in 642:Thanks for the awesome report 626:add the page to your watchlist 79:Checkmate! – WikiProject Chess 1: 393:that arguably could be split. 675:22:25, 31 January 2013 (UTC) 657:19:53, 31 January 2013 (UTC) 414:Bishop and knight checkmate 757: 302:collection of resources 251:, the first undisputed 665:Thanks for the kudos! 623:. To follow comments, 538: 526:"WikiProject report" → 278: 270: 269:and political activist 255: 241: 229: 225:Playing pieces from a 175: 47: 648:on the Wikimedia blog 537: 276: 261: 247: 235: 224: 174: 46: 619:from this article's 518:"WikiProject report" 253:world chess champion 298:interviewed in 2011 646:. We excerpted it 610:Discuss this story 590:Arbitration report 570:WikiProject report 539: 410:endgame tablebases 279: 271: 265:, a Russian chess 256: 242: 230: 227:Staunton chess set 176: 76:WikiProject report 53:← Back to Contents 48: 634:purging the cache 595:Technology report 575:Discussion report 287:to an interview, 284:WikiProject Chess 58:View Latest Issue 26:(Redirected from 748: 724: 654: 637: 635: 629: 608: 585:Featured content 557: 549: 542: 525: 517: 448: 442: 249:Wilhelm Steinitz 236:A recreation of 214:WikiProject Desk 211: 180: 179:WikiProject news 177: 173: 164: 150: 149: 140: 139: 130: 129: 120: 119: 110: 109: 100: 99: 70: 68: 66: 31: 756: 755: 751: 750: 749: 747: 746: 745: 731: 730: 729: 728: 727: 726: 725: 720: 718: 713: 708: 703: 698: 691: 683: 682: 652: 639: 631: 624: 613: 612: 606:+ Add a comment 604: 600: 599: 598: 565:Recent research 550: 547:28 January 2013 545: 543: 540: 529: 528: 523: 520: 515: 446: 440: 310:can be expanded 219: 218: 217: 209: 203: 184: 183: 178: 171: 169: 165: 159: 158: 157: 156: 147: 137: 127: 117: 107: 97: 91: 88: 77: 73: 71: 65:28 January 2013 61: 60: 55: 49: 39: 33: 32: 25: 24: 12: 11: 5: 754: 752: 744: 743: 733: 732: 719: 714: 709: 704: 699: 694: 693: 692: 685: 684: 681: 680: 679: 678: 677: 660: 659: 614: 611: 603: 602: 601: 597: 592: 587: 582: 580:News and notes 577: 572: 567: 562: 556: 544: 532: 531: 530: 521: 512: 511: 510: 499: 497: 496: 486: 485: 472: 471: 462: 461: 451: 450: 430: 429: 405: 404: 395: 394: 389: 388: 375: 374: 371:Magnus Carlsen 365: 364: 350: 349: 337: 336: 324: 323: 263:Garry Kasparov 204: 202: 201: 185: 182:In a few words 181: 168: 167: 166: 155: 154: 144: 134: 124: 114: 104: 93: 92: 89: 83: 82: 81: 80: 75: 74: 72: 69: 56: 51: 50: 41: 40: 34: 15: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 753: 742: 739: 738: 736: 723: 717: 712: 707: 702: 697: 689: 676: 672: 668: 664: 663: 662: 661: 658: 655: 653:Matthew (WMF) 649: 645: 641: 640: 636: 627: 622: 618: 607: 596: 593: 591: 588: 586: 583: 581: 578: 576: 573: 571: 568: 566: 563: 561: 558: 554: 548: 541:In this issue 536: 527: 519: 509: 507: 503: 493: 492: 491: 490: 483: 479: 478: 477: 476: 468: 464: 463: 458: 457: 456: 455: 445: 444:Chess diagram 437: 436: 435: 434: 427: 426:Chess endgame 423: 419: 415: 411: 407: 406: 401: 397: 396: 391: 390: 386: 382: 381: 380: 379: 372: 367: 366: 361: 360: 359: 358: 356: 347: 343: 342:User:Krakatoa 339: 338: 334: 330: 326: 325: 320: 319: 318: 317: 313: 311: 307: 303: 299: 295: 290: 286: 285: 275: 268: 264: 260: 254: 250: 246: 239: 234: 228: 223: 215: 208: 200:end this week 199: 198: 193: 192: 187: 186: 163: 153: 145: 143: 135: 133: 125: 123: 115: 113: 105: 103: 95: 94: 86: 67: 59: 54: 45: 29: 23: 19: 687: 569: 560:In the media 553:all comments 498: 488: 487: 474: 473: 453: 452: 432: 431: 422:Rook endgame 385:grandmasters 377: 376: 352: 351: 315: 314: 282: 280: 206: 195: 189: 722:Suggestions 617:transcluded 322:altogether. 267:grandmaster 412:, such as 400:middlegame 90:Share this 85:Contribute 22:2013-01-28 716:Subscribe 667:–Mabeenot 621:talk page 467:DreamHost 403:endgames. 289:Sjakkalle 735:Category 711:Newsroom 706:Archives 688:Signpost 644:Mabeenot 516:Previous 482:WP:CHESS 363:section. 346:User:SyG 304:, seeks 238:The Turk 207:Signpost 162:Mabeenot 132:LinkedIn 112:Facebook 20:‎ | 506:archive 122:Twitter 502:fjords 333:Karmøy 329:rating 142:Reddit 102:E-mail 701:About 355:chess 16:< 696:Home 686:The 671:talk 524:Next 416:and 398:The 344:and 194:and 188:The 152:Digg 495:it. 470:it. 160:By 87:— 737:: 673:) 514:← 508:. 447:}} 441:{{ 312:. 212:s 669:( 638:. 628:. 555:) 551:( 428:. 335:. 296:( 216:. 210:' 30:)

Index

Knowledge (XXG):Knowledge (XXG) Signpost
2013-01-28
Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Chess in The Signpost
The Signpost
← Back to Contents
View Latest Issue
28 January 2013
Contribute
E-mail
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Digg
Mabeenot
January Copyedit Backlog Elimination Drive
January Articles for Creation Drive
WikiProject Desk

Staunton chess set

The Turk

Wilhelm Steinitz
world chess champion

Garry Kasparov
grandmaster

WikiProject Chess

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