ics command by Matt McKnight, Winboard Forum, May 18, 2011.WinBoard protocol driver by Harm Geert Muller, Winboard Forum - Chess Programming Lessons, April 30, 2011.WinBoard 4.5 downloads by Harm Geert Muller, Winboard Forum, February 06, 2011.WinBoard, exotic version by Harm Geert Muller, CCC, January 15, 2011.Multiple WinBoard installations by Robert Pope, Winboard Forum, August 17, 2010.Aquarium (other GUIs too?) and WB support => I am shocked by Miguel A.WinBoard & by Thomas Mayer, Winboard Forum, January 25, 2010.winboard engine config popup by Will Singleton, Winboard Forum, November 19, 2009.Adapter for non-standard chess engine to Winboard by Carey, CCC, October 10, 2009.UCI protocol in winboard by Engin Üstün, Winboard Forum, September 24, 2009 » Chess Engine Communication Protocol, UCI.It's a plague of Winboard engines by Kirill Kryukov, Winboard Forum, August 20, 2009 » Time Management.A Basic Guide for setting up Winboard a UCI Chess Engine by Charles Browne, Winboard Forum,.WinBoard 4.3 Downloads by Harm Geert Muller, Winboard Forum, August 23, 2008.CPU usage at 505 in Winboard Engine by mjlef, Winboard Forum, July 19, 2006.A question about kibitz by Niyaz Khasanov, Winboard Forum, February 18, 2005.Safe I/O (repeated) by Fabien Letouzey, Winboard Forum, February 11, 2005.Kiwi for Win98 and input-reading stuff by Alessandro Scotti, CCC, September 29, 2004 » Kiwi, Windows, C++, Thread.Daniel's Winboard: kibitzing? by David Rasmussen, CCC, February 05, 2003.New Winboard version 4.3.0 released by Daniel Mehrmann, CCC, February 05, 2003.bug by David Rasmussen, CCC, December 07, 2002 » Debugging.xboard and WinBoard 4.2.4 released by Tim Mann, gnu.chess, December 10, 2001.Winboard for Dummies by Russell Reagan, rgcc, June 30, 2001.WinBoard and pondering under W98 by Frank Phillips, CCC, July 28, 1999 » Pondering.xboard/WinBoard 4.0.0 available by Tim Mann, rgc, June 21, 1998.XBoard and WinBoard, version 3.6.0 by Tim Mann, rgc, May 09, 1997.Problems with Winboard - fix? by Valavan Manohararajah, rgcc, June 6 1996.XBoard and WinBoard 3.4, patchlevel 1 by Tim Mann,, December 13 1995.Re: Accessing remote computers with WinBoard by Tim Mann, gnu.chess, November 7, 1993.It is also the main reason why recently there are so few computer chess tournaments using Winboard as a Tournament Manager even it has enough functions to do that task. Not supporting directly UCI engines is a huge disadvantage since almost all new and/or strong chess engines nowadays are UCI ones. However, some users criticize it since it does not support directly UCI's chess engines as well as it has old-style, complicated and hard to use interface. Winboard was the first-ever and unique for a while chess graphical user interface with good and very fast graphics, various functions, almost enough for general users. However, UCI's chess engines can run with Winboard via some adapters such as PolyGlot, UCI2WB ones. Winboard supports only Chess Engine Communication Protocol. It would be nice to make some major revisions, but then of course it would (at best) take a long time for the existing engines to convert over to the new protocol, so both would have to be supported, probably forever. Unfortunately, because the protocol was never really designed, but just grew out of documenting the existing communication with GNU Chess, there are still several bugs and deficiencies in it today. The document that exists now (chess-engines.html) evolved directly from the original email reply I sent to Shay. Over the years I received so many requests for this information that I was more or less forced into documenting and extending the ad-hoc engine protocol to support them. I think the first person to ask was Shay Bushinsky, in November 1994. Because the GUI and the chess engine are separate programs, several people thought of the idea of connecting their own chess programs in place of GNU Chess, and they began to email me asking how to do it. Originally, xboard and WinBoard were simply graphical user interfaces for GNU Chess, then for GNU Chess and Internet chess servers. Tim Mann's quote from an Interview by Frank Quisinsky, April 2000 :
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