MCO in pgn format

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wickedpuppy

Hello there Smile

I'm preparing my opening's repertoire and I wonder why no one ever made a pgn (or whatever database format) version of Modern Chess Openings.

I have the book in "analogic format" (paper Tongue out), but it would be easier for me to have it in some digital format in order to import it in my openings database.

Does anyone know whether such a version is available?

Nytik

If it is, it's illegal.

So stop looking.

Smile

wickedpuppy

Dear Nytik, if Random House or whoever else publishes it and I can buy it, it's not.

I repeat: I own the book and I just need the moves, even without annotations or evaluations.

wickedpuppy

Dear Kepler, I'm not asking for illegal items.

I just wonder if the "copyright owner" have published some digital version of his work, and if I can buy it somewhere.

rigamagician

There is ChessBase Opening Encyclopedia 2009 and an electronic versions of Sahovski's Encyclopedia of Chess Openings.

aansel

MCO through Random House does not have an electronic version--as mentioned Chess Informant and ChessBase have electronic versions of openings. I also think Convekta (Chess Assistant) has an electronic opening guide as well.

wickedpuppy

Thank you, guys! Smile

They both look fine. Do you suggest either?

rigamagician

The early editions of ECO had top class GMs like Korchnoi and Keres doing the analysis.  The Informant magazine still has top of the line annotators, but it's mostly Yugoslav IMs and GMs writing ECO now.  It's still one of the largest encyclopedias, but I feel the quality has fallen a little compared to the earlier editions.

The Chessbase Encyclopedia incorporates articles written over the course of the last decade.  Many of the analysts are top class eg. Jussupow, but they don't always include the latest games, and quite a few lines have no evaluation.  Even so, I think I prefer Chessbase's Encyclopedia over ECO, and both of them over MCO.  The Informant magazine is also a valuable resource for keeping up to date, the best of its kind if you don't mind reading games annotated with symbols rather than words.

I don't think I've ever seen Convetka's encyclopedia although I'm sure they must have one.

wickedpuppy

Dear Rigamagician, thank you very much for the useful advice.

I was inclined to buy the ECO, expecially when I saw the annotators' names, but I think I'll go for the CB.

erikido23

I would suggest you look at something like chesspublishing.com as well(membership based site which is well worth the price imop).  They show theoretically important games, have downloadable ebooks and you can even ask masters questions on openings you have been having trouble with.   

wickedpuppy

WOW, this chesspublishing.com looks great!

Thank you very much, guys! Chess.com people are wonderful! Laughing