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<title>Chess.com - Play. Learn. Share.</title>
<description>Online chess community where you can play chess, learn strategies and tactics, read chess news, see book reviews, find rules &amp; tips, get free downloads, and more!</description>
<link>http://www.chess.com/</link>
<copyright>2007 Chess.com</copyright>
    <item><title>The Study Buddy Group?</title><description>&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;I am so far pretty pleased with my silicon based Study Buddies (CD-discs from Convekta) but I am not at all pleased with my sparring partner (Chessmaster). It appears to be very difficult for software to play bad and humanlike ch...</description><link>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/the-study-buddy-group</link><pubDate>Wed, 19 Mar 2008 07:39:28 -0700</pubDate><guid>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/the-study-buddy-group</guid></item><item><title>New Year&#226;€™s Chess Resolution</title><description>It is that time of the year when you have to make plans and promises for the future. Well, &#38;quot;chesswise&#38;quot; I will go with:&#38;nbsp; 100 minutes of chess studies per weekAt least one slow game (G/30+) per weekAnnotate most of my slow games (espe...</description><link>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/new-years-chess-resolution</link><pubDate>Thu, 20 Dec 2007 04:13:42 -0800</pubDate><guid>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/new-years-chess-resolution</guid></item><item><title>Slow Paced Online Reading Group for Wood Pushers?</title><description>Does this sound familiar: &#38;quot;I really would like to read a few chess books but....&#38;quot; May I suggest a gentle kick in the butt? Here is my humble suggestion: &#38;nbsp; Let&#38;#39;s create a slow shcedule for reading a book (I mean really slow!) and...</description><link>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/slow-paced-online-reading-group-for-wood-pushers</link><pubDate>Tue, 27 Nov 2007 06:46:04 -0800</pubDate><guid>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/slow-paced-online-reading-group-for-wood-pushers</guid></item><item><title>Wood Pusher Training</title><description>Well, My Previous Training Schedule (see blog entry)&#38;nbsp;failed. I have decided to try an even slower regime: 15+ minutes of Tactics every dayAt least two G/30 every weekWorking thru at least one of the semi slow games every weekMeasure &#38;quot;pro...</description><link>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/wood-pusher-training</link><pubDate>Sat, 24 Nov 2007 05:20:23 -0800</pubDate><guid>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/wood-pusher-training</guid></item><item><title>To annotate or not to annotate?</title><description>&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;It makes a lot of sense to study Master Games but what about studying your own games? I do think self-annotated games can be a great way for the ambitious player to improve. The fact that I am a rather crappy player is not an obstacle....</description><link>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/to-annotate-or-not-to-annotate</link><pubDate>Tue, 19 Jun 2007 02:17:45 -0700</pubDate><guid>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/to-annotate-or-not-to-annotate</guid></item><item><title>My Diary as a Chess Player</title><description>Chess Player? Well, please allow me to define a &#38;rdquo;Chess Player&#38;rdquo; as someone who plays chess. It would be nice to add some quality aspects to the suggested definition or perhaps to do something to improve my Chess Skills.&#38;nbsp; Anyhow, at...</description><link>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/my-diary-as-a-chess-player</link><pubDate>Mon, 11 Jun 2007 01:47:06 -0700</pubDate><guid>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/my-diary-as-a-chess-player</guid></item><item><title>Openings for the Beginner</title><description>An Opening Repertoire for the Beginning Player&#38;nbsp;First of all: The Beginning players should not memorize openings&#38;nbsp;I think that is an obvious way to get bored with chess. I tried to learn some chess as a kid but I soon got discouraged from ...</description><link>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/openings-for-the-beginner</link><pubDate>Mon, 04 Jun 2007 01:08:52 -0700</pubDate><guid>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/openings-for-the-beginner</guid></item><item><title>Self Studies: Stoyko Exercise</title><description>&#38;nbsp; FM Steve Stoyko has suggested the following exercise: Pick a non-static Middlegame positionTry to evaluate the main variation of each possible moveWrite down the evaluation and try to estimate the &#38;quot;value&#38;quot; of each variation. You ca...</description><link>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/self-studies-stoyko-exercise</link><pubDate>Sun, 03 Jun 2007 01:48:25 -0700</pubDate><guid>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/self-studies-stoyko-exercise</guid></item><item><title>Claim to fame!</title><description>This might be my only claim to chess fame. I never thought I would experience this Miniature.</description><link>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/claim-to-fame</link><pubDate>Fri, 01 Jun 2007 13:28:15 -0700</pubDate><guid>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/claim-to-fame</guid></item><item><title>My Home Made Self Study Course</title><description>&#38;nbsp; My Home Made Self Study Course (T) Littlewood: &#38;quot;Chess Tactics&#38;quot;, Batsford (March 28, 2005)  (S) Capablanca: &#38;quot;Chess Fundamentals&#38;quot;, Everyman Chess; Algebraic edition (December 1994)&#38;nbsp;  (M) McDonald: &#38;quot;Modern Chess M...</description><link>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/my-home-made-self-study-course</link><pubDate>Tue, 29 May 2007 01:09:36 -0700</pubDate><guid>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/my-home-made-self-study-course</guid></item><item><title>Self Studies</title><description>Well, I decided quite recently to give the Old Brain some work-out. Chess seemed like an excellent idea. I have played Backgammon and Bridge at a fairly high level. However, when I tried chess years ago I soon got discouraged from choosing a bad a...</description><link>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/self-studies</link><pubDate>Tue, 29 May 2007 00:25:52 -0700</pubDate><guid>http://blog.chess.com/farbror/self-studies</guid></item></channel></rss>