The team that manages and develops the club can be reached via the following four methods.
Please take into consideration that we process many messages a day, be clear, short, and leave all previous discussion quoted in your message.
1. Contact us via email
Please find the following email addresses to send a message to us:
Field
Person
Email
Send email to the Support Team if you are in trouble with the usage of the server or you have any question, or problem
Write our postmaster, if you have any trouble with sending email messages for us, or to the chess server, or if you have any trouble receiving messages sent by us or by the chess server
You can also use the following form to send us a message. This method is useful if you can't use your email client or in case of an email delivery trouble.
3. Contact us via the forums
You can use the forums also to reach us.
Forums are more public: all the visitors can read your message.
This method is useful if you have serious email problem either sending messages, receiving or both, or you want your message to be public and read (or either replied) by others too.
Find the forums here: http://www.e4ec.org/forum.html
The ELO system for rating chessplayers was named after its originator, Arpad Elo. Born in 1903, Elo emigrated to the USA when he was 10. Educated at Chicago University, he later became professor of physics at Marquette University, Milwaukee. He learned to play chess in his teens and played in a number of tournaments. He was champion or co-champion of Wisconsin 9 times between 1935 and 1961. He was active in the USCF (United States Chess Federation) from its founding in 1939. He spent 20 years developing and validating his chess rating system, which was adopted by FIDE in 1970 for international use.
His book 'The Rating of Chessplayers, Past and Present' was published in 1978 and is the definitive reference on the ELO rating system. Most chess organisations that perform ratings for players use the ELO system, or a variation of it.
Games start from the standard initial setup by default, but it is possible to start new games from any setup.
Other setups can be given at challenges, in the following two ways::
With move list: the given sequence of valid moves that reach the specific setup.
With FEN line: this is the standard one line description of any position (either invalid)
With these two ways we can excersize openings, middle games or endings, or can replay games from one point, or else.
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