Javier Posted December 17, 2007 Report Share Posted December 17, 2007 "In the 1950's and 60's I was a very active chess player. I used to play at least 40 hours per week, was the captain of our strong college chess team and played in quite a few tournaments. Although I was not a particularly strong player, I sure spent a lot of my youth enjoying the game. I am now older, and my interest in chess has subsided. However, I do want to claim my rightful place in chess history as the inventor and first commercial vendor of the digital chess clock. In 1966 I retired from chess and committed my time to a professional career. However, in 1973 I was invited by a neighbor to play in a local tournament in the San Diego (California) area. At that tournament I noticed that every one of the players was still using a mechanical chess clock -- of a design patented in about the year 1900. Since I was at the time involved in electronics, I decided to investigate the possibility of commercializing a digital version of this device. More -- I decided to concurrently dramatically advance the method of time keeping in chess. For the next eight years I focused nearly all my "free" time on this endeavor. In 1975 (together with my electrical engineer Jeff Ponsor, who has passed away about ten years ago) I filed for and received the first patent (Number 4,062,180) on a fully operational (microprocessor based) digital chess clock. An additional patent (USA & European) for a more advanced version with many additional features was awarded in 1981 (4,247,925). My chess clock concept resulted from years of conceptualization and testing and thousands of hours of work. I even published my MBA thesis on this subject -- "Demand Analysis for a New Product (Digital Chess Clock)" -- at San Diego State University, 1978. For this thesis I interviewed and surveyed thousands of chess players from all over the world, and every chess association and identified chess club worldwide. " Read the full article HERE. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wiredknight Posted April 11, 2008 Report Share Posted April 11, 2008 The first digital chess clock was made in 1973 by a Cornell University Engineering student. This precedes Joe Meshi by 2 years. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_chess_clock Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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