![]() ![]() Then click the “Database” button in the ribbon under the “Home” menu: Launch Fritz (or any of the other programs in its “family” as listed above) to go to the program’s main chessboard screen. You don’t have to do this you could easily store the games as part of the larger database if you want to, but most players’ preference is to store the games in a “personal” database. The first step is to create a new database into which you’ll copy your PGN games, to keep them separate from the large database which comes with the software. Note I said “a little”, and you can easily learn it by clicking on the link I’ve provided in the right-hand sidebar of this blog. It can be done in Fritz/Rybka, but it takes several steps, and you’ll also need to know a little something about computer files and folders. He asked how to add each game to a database. I was reminded of this subject by an e-mail the other day from a user who plays a fair bit of online chess at a site which furnishes him with a gamescore after each game, a gamescore which is sent in Portable Game Notation (PGN) format. There’s one more topic we need to cover before we discuss how to use the analysis features in the Fritz family of playing programs ( Fritz, Rybka, Hiarcs, Shredder, and Junior) to actually improve our play: how do we get games other than ones we’ve played against the computer into a database for analysis? ![]()
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