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I'll add <b>Ruddigore Chess</b> to my 'to do' list, but since that's already 1.83 miles long, don't expect it this quarter. But I will almost
certainly write a Zillions Rules File for it, and bully poor Tony Quintanilla into playing it with me by e-mail so I can see if it works or not before publishing. Someday.
<p>
(I realize I don't <em>need</em> Zillions to play the game by e-mail, but it makes it more convenient and enforces rules that might get missed. Also, I find programming a game a good way to examine a game's rules in details.)
If you think Ruddigore Chess seems playable, by all means test a bit more and write it up! You're the inventor. I just blathered away with a crude sketch of the rules and a crazy suggestion, you saw the possibilities and found the specific rule-set that makes it work -- in other words, you do all the hard work, it's your game. <P> You'll mention me, of course, but you know I would never have pursued the idea further...
David, will this page be linked to the side bar somehow? That would help in
the future when it is not longer the new item in the Feedback page.
It seems to me that <b>Ruddigore Chess</b> actually seems playable! But I
would suggest that the first three turns be declared a Bank Holiday with
no capturing required.
David, Peter, great idea! This makes it easy to comment, is practical,
timely, and should have a wide audience.
Most of the recent flood of commants/feebback was caused by my article on ''Chatter Chess'''', which has not yet been seen. <P> Imagine what may happen if chatter chess ever sees the light of day, will the comment system be able to handle such volume? <P> These are important considerations.... <P> <Blink>
if a comment is submitted in non-html mode, things that appear to be html tags are not printed. But the preview prints them!!! <P> The previous line appears blank but contained left-angle-bracket. P, right-angle-bracket. In preview mode, I saw the html tag, but when viewing comments I see a blank line. <P> This is inconsistent behavior.
if a comment is submitted in non-html mode, things that appear to be html tags are not printed. Are they interpreted? here's an hr:<HR> <P> The previous line appears blank but contained left-angle-bracket. P, right-angle-bracket. <P> This is inconsistent behavior.
if a comment is submitted in html mode, its left margin is indented. <P> Non-html comments start at page left. <P> The above is true when viewing with lynx. Your mileage may vary if you use any of the inferior alternatives. <P>
Perhaps html mode does not work. I see no link about cockles.
<P>
It should be noted that those who use an invisible smiley must make
arrangements to pay a null royalty to me. It was I who invented it, for use in afu.
<P>
I will type in a <A HREF=http://www.lynx.browser.org/>link</a> to test html-mode comments.
What about ratings abysmal, mediocre, and superb? Keeping the discussion alive alive O, I always thot that cockles were a type of dialectic seafood, suitable for the musselbound. However, if in doubt, the question can be submitted to alt.usage.english, a font of linguistic wisdom. Submit without review is not necessary as long as it is made obvious that submit can be found within review: we are accustomed to pesky and insecure programs asking us 'are you sure, are you really reaaly sure, should I do what you said or are you a jerk? 99 and 44/100ths, not 99.4; Ivory Soap (tm). It's your turn in the barrel, as Safire recently apologized for saying -- the phrase is the punchline of a *dirty* joke, you see. Many adages and colloquialisms come from jokes or from Ad Age; and they are ephemeral, for example who today would know what ad agency I one worked for if I specify that it sounds like a suitcase falling down a flight of stairs, as Marcel Duchamp once said. Oh, sorry, it was Fred Allen who said it. As comedians in the Borscht Belt once asked, 'Where's the beet?' Back to topic, how can there be a Comdey Chess, in which every move is a joke??
Regarding 'cockles', below. Note that the link actually provides no solution to the meaning of 'cockles' in this sense. Neither does the Oxford English Dictionary, which has much the same info as the editor's link. The upshot is, we don't know what 'cockles' are. I once read a hypothesis that suggested that expressions that were used formulaicly, but made no sense (like 'dead as a doornail') were actually the punchlines of forgotten jokes. Sounds dopey, but think of how many punchlines you use as metaphors in colloquial conversation, and how often you really tell the jokes they go with.
Once more, with feeling!
<p>
John Lawson wrote:
<blockquote>
'And on the other topic, once youopen the door to Gilbert and Sullivan
chess, logic dictates all sorts of generalizations (Aristophanes chess,
Tolstoi chess, Rowling chess, ad...ad...I dunno)'
</blockquote>
And all of them potentially good articles that would warm the cockles
an an editor's heart (assuming they have any -- and just what the heck
<em>are</em> cockles anyway?). When do you think you can start? <g>
<p>Editor's note: <a href="http://www.word-detective.com/012199.html#cockles">cockles</a> --DH.
Thanks for the space, David (my mind, <em>tidy</em>? -- now there's
a strange concept!).
<p>[I'd have said you had a beautiful mind, but that phrase was already taken. --DH]
Ok, it's here. The general comments page. Have at it!!
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