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2003:
The DGT XL Clock
The DGT XL, was introduced during the Dutch Team Playoffs in 2003.
It is based on ten years of experience in the chess market. The
clock has extra large displays, an option to display messages (great
for internet chess), more timing methods, including an upcount method
for use with Scrabble®, easier operation, a buzzer and it connects
to the DGT electronic chess
board too.
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2001:
The DGT DigiBlitz Clock
Especially for personal use, DGT Projects developed the DigiBlitz.
With large displays, an optional buzzer, count down and count up
timing methods, this model offers much for a low price. Not manufactured anymore, now we offer the DGT Easy Game Timer.
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1998:
The DGT 2000 Clock
The DGT 2000 introduced several minor improvements over the DGT
Fide model, including more clear and robust displays.
As proven top-quality product, it is still being used in many tournaments
all over the world. Click here to
read more.
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1996: The DGT Topmatch Clock
The DGT TopMatch Clock is similar to the famous DGT FIDE chess
clock, with an added serial interface that allows it to connect
to the DGT electronic Chessboard.
This model is replaced by the DGT XL and not manufactured anymore.
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1994:
The DGT Plus Clock
The DGT Plus was developed in 1994 in special cooperation
with the European Go Federation (EGF), for use in the European
Go championship in Maastricht. The DGT Plus has the ability to make
a sound at the approach of a time limit - a short buzz
at 10, 5, 4, 3 or 2 seconds before 0.00, and a long buzz during
the last second.
Why did the EGF ask for this feature? The standard Go tournament
timing method byo-yomi has always required an arbiter with a stopwatch
to stand by the board near the end of the game and announce the
game's last seconds. This allows the player to keep concentrating
on the board, rather than watching the clock (i.e., a standard chess
clock). The DGT Plus makes this manual announcement unnecessary.
The DGT Plus's buzzer option is also useful in chess.
Since the introduction of the Fischer and FIDE timing methods, players
can approach the time limit many times during a game. The buzzer
helps players make their moves in time without requiring them to
look at the clock and take their concentration away from the board.
The World Chess Federation (FIDE) acknowledged the value
of this feature. FIDE's new Laws of Chess, enacted by the
General Assembly in 1996, state that an audible signal is allowed
at the approach of the time limit.
The DGT Plus is replaced by the DGT XL and not manufactured anymore.
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1994: The DGT Fide Clock
Since it was introduced in 1994, many DGT FIDE Chess Clocks have
been sold around the world. The clock was created in cooperation
with the World Chess Federation (FIDE), and is the only
digital clock that fully conforms with the FIDE Laws of Chess.
The DGT FIDE clock was the first digital clock to be widely accepted
in the chess community, although attempts to introduce an electronic
chess clock had been made since the '70s. The DGT clock was succesful
where others failed because it was developed from a chess
player's point of view.
One example is the large lever on top. It's not only easy
to hit in blitz or time-scramble situations, but it clearly
shows which player's turn it is to move - from up to 20
meters away.
The DGT Fide clock has 12 timing systems suited for chess and many
other games like xiangqi (chinese chess), go, scrabble®, checkers,
etc. It is very easy to use, and electronically
accurate. The DGT adds a new dimension of excitement to your game!
This model was replaced by the DGT 2000 in 1998.
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1985: The first DGT
The first DGT clock was built in the mid-'80s by Ben Bulsink. At that
time, he was a student at the Technical University Twente in Enschede,
the Netherlands; now he is R&D manager of DGT Projects.
The clock was reviewed by the magazine of the Dutch Chess Federation,
who called it "the perfect chess clock."
There was one problem, however: The clock was handmade, and much too
expensive for the average chess player. After only about 60 of these
clocks were made, Bulsink moved on to a job at the university.
In 1992, Bulsink was contacted by chess teacher and organizer Albert
Vasse, who would become DGT Projects' manager of marketing and sales.
In the book of the first Melody Amber tournament, Vasse read that
the tournament's sponsor, Joop van Oosterom, wanted to use the Fischer
timing system in the next tournament. Vasse and Bulsink offered
to build the clocks for that tournament. They got the job.
With a mutual friend, Paul Arentz, Vasse and Bulsink investigated
the options for mass producing an electronic chess clock. Arentz later
left the company. After the positive reaction to the DGT at the Melody
Amber tournament, the partners met with the board of the World Chess
Federation (FIDE). This was at the start of the 1993 world championship
match between Anatoly Karpov and Jan Timman. Two months later, at
the FIDE General Assembly in Curitiba, Brazil, awarded a three year
contract to DGT Projects to produce "the official FIDE
chess clock." |
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