Telegraph chess: A 19th century tech marvel

(spectrum.ieee.org)

44 points | by sohkamyung 7 days ago

6 comments

  • gorgoiler 21 hours ago
    ”There are records of games played over radio, on telephone lines, satellite, … forums, and email.”

    My father went to a boarding school. In defiance of his housemaster’s nightly curfew, he and his friend would play cross-dormitory chess using the heating pipes as a medium for Morse code tapped out on the radiators.

    It was just the two of them playing through a wall. It would be a fun exercise to implement a fully manual pipe tapping protocol that implements addressing, collision avoidance, retransmission, and distributed consensus. So much fun in fact — and I think this site is definitely a safe space to admit one’s sense of “fun” being quite niche — that it surely must have been done already. TCP/IP/Ethernet: The board game (?)

    • kqr 20 hours ago
      Did they somehow find a way to make a long tap (e.g. slide something against the radiator for a continuous signal) or did they agree on two different kinds of short taps? (Or do the pipes resonate for long but can be dampened by hand to produce a short tap?)
      • cwillu 17 hours ago
        I believe the usual thing is to essentially encode it by the spaces between the taps, rather than the taps themselves.
        • kqr 11 hours ago
          But then how does one distinguish between letters? Something like "ETA" would be difficult to tell apart from "II".
      • qingcharles 10 hours ago
  • kenjackson 1 day ago
    When i was growing up “correspondence chess” was a thing. Where you submitted your next move to your opponent over snail mail. Even back then I thought this was too slow for me, but I later understood that people would play many different game simultaneously.
    • kqr 20 hours ago
      It's still a thing and they even have world championships in it. Everyone always draws because it's basically just Stockfish vs. Stockfish. (Okay in the most recent one there were actually a shared first place, a shared second place, and one person in third place. The latter died during the tournament, and whether the others ended up in first or second place depended on whether they had drawn with third place before he died or if they won on time.)
      • eterm 17 hours ago
        That sounds like satire but is actually true:

        It appears that in the latest championship, a full 10 players shared first place, because one person died:

        https://www.iccf.com/event?id=100104

        All other games were drawn.

        What a rather unserious organisation.

      • anthk 15 hours ago
        Is Freechess.org safe from Stockfish/Gnuchess and the like?
    • oneeyedpigeon 17 hours ago
      lichess.org still calls a casual remote game 'correspondence'. My partner and I often play from either end of the same sofa :)
  • qsort 22 hours ago
    I got nerd sniped and tried to reconstruct the games. The notation is weird and they aren't using modern conventions (a1 is dark, queens on the d-file, kings on the e-file, white goes first.)

    Also, as the article mentions there are a few errors. With a bit of deduction this is my best attempt at reconstructing the first one:

    https://lichess.org/HzzfuyWv

    In keeping with the theme of exciting new technology, I tried giving the problem to Opus 4.5 but it seems to hallucinate badly: https://claude.ai/share/299fb10e-8465-41b3-bad5-85500291ed67

  • b00ty4breakfast 23 hours ago
    There were (maybe still are? I couldn't locate any active clubs with a cursory search) ham radio chess clubs that would play chess on-air over cw/radiotelegraphy.
    • pettertb 20 hours ago
      That is perhaps the most deeply nerdy thing I have heard of
      • anthk 16 hours ago
        On par of Microchess https://www.benlo.com/microchess/index.html and Nanochess https://nanochess.org from Óscar Toledo.

        Microchess has a C-port with an emulated MOS 6502 inside. That's it, you are actually simulating a barebones Kim-1 with Microchess as the bundled "ROM" already in RAM.

        I might port the C port to its transputer with Micro-C if I'm bored.

  • zkmon 20 hours ago
    Electronic communications came out of blue, outpacing the traditional messengers at blitz speeds, heralding the arrival of aliens that do not recognize distance between locations, lack time duration to do work and create clones. They can build a retail shop that available everywhere in the world all the time. with cloned salesmen.

    Aliens from quantum world. Quite unearthly and unhuman.

  • anthk 16 hours ago
    • busfahrer 13 hours ago
      Slightly related, Video Chess is a Chess game for the Atari VCS/2600, very technically impressive since the VCS only has 128 bytes(!) of RAM. Another technical limitation are the VCS's rudimentary sprites, that wouldn't even allow to draw all of the pieces' symbols in the same row, the had to interlace the game pieces.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_Chess

      • anthk 12 hours ago
        Not an issue for the Kim-1, as it just displayed the output as three hex numbers (color-piece start-square end-square). But later it got a serial interface.