First Internet Backgammon Server

First Internet Backgammon Server

First Internet Backgammon Server (FIBS) is the earliest backgammon server on the internet, operating since July 19, 1992.cite web
title = Original 1992 Usenet announcement
url = http://groups.google.co.uk/group/rec.games.backgammon/browse_thread/thread/52787c05073958f1/90530ae12919967f?lnk=st
format = HTML
accessdate = 2008-05-05
] cite web
title = Original 1992 announcement
url = http://www.bkgm.com/rgb/rgb.cgi?view+229
format = HTML
accessdate = 2006-12-13
] FIBS allows internet users to play backgammon in real-time against other people and tracks player performance using a modified version of the ELO rating system.cite web
title = The FIBS Rating System
author = Kevin Bastian
url = http://www.bkgm.com/articles/McCool/ratings.html
format = HTML
accessdate = 2007-01-12
] It was created by Andreas "Marvin" Schneidercite book
url = http://books.google.com/books?id=zmZ8MmCl8EMC&client=firefox-a
title = Backgammon for Blood: A Guide for Those Who Like to Play But Love to Win
author = Chris Bray
year = 2007
publisher = Skyhorse Publishing
isbn = 160239184X
] , and has been maintained since 1996 by Patti Beadles. Anyone with access to the internet can create a username and play for free. FIBS caters to a strong international community of backgammon players.cite web
title = FIBS FAQ
url = http://www.fibs.com/guide.html
format = HTML
accessdate = 2006-08-31
] It was an "immediate success", and no other backgammon server came online until 1997.

Game play

Early users connected to FIBS via a command line interface through TELNET similar to a MUD, with the standard backgammon board drawn in ASCII text. Dice rolls are represented numerically and moves are performed by entering starting and ending point numbers, similar to standard backgammon notation. Other game related commands are available by typing the appropriate command. The first graphical user interfaces for FIBS were developed in 1994; FIBS/W for Windows and MacFIBS for Mac OS. Graphical interfaces continue to be developed for most major computing platforms, however telnet remains the underlying protocol for FIBS. This allows anyone with access to the internet to log into FIBS regardless of platform.

have been developed, some based on neural net programs like gnubg, Jellyfish, TD-Gammon, and Snowie, to allow human players to compete with these computer programs on FIBS and to analyze these programs' performance in real-world play. Gerry Tesauro of IBM's Thomas J. Watson Research Center wrote TD-Gammon, noted in "Scientific American" as the first expert-strength backgammon program. This is one way FIBS has served as an experimental platform for the advancement of computer science and continues to do so.

The server provided the first opportunity for backgammon players to be rated on the Elo rating system first devised for chess. The server has been used for testing artificial intelligence concepts using the backgammon bot "LGammon", written by Mark Land of the University of California, San Diego. [cite book
url = http://books.google.com/books?id=0Q_RBtFGMc4C&client=firefox-a
title = Machines that Learn to Play Games
author = Johannes Furnkranz, Miroslav Kubat
year = 2001
publisher = Nova Publishers
isbn = 1590330218
page = 113-114
]

Community

FIBS supports communication between players via text messages using the "shout" command which broadcasts to all players, in-game using the "kibitz" or "whisper" commands, and privately using the "tell" command. FIBS is largely unmoderated; its sysop typically tends to technical issues with the server. The "shout" command was initially implemented as a way for a player to find an opponent but has developed into a method of communicating with the general FIBS population. Users have a range of options to filter the amount of text messaging they receive, from ignoring troublesome users (with the "gag" command) to fully blocking receipt of all "shout" messages (using the "toggle silent" command).

Notes

External links

* [http://www.fibs.com The Official FIBS home page]
* [http://www.fibsboard.com The Fibs portal page and forum]


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