Innovation starts with solving personal problems. Every chess player writes down their moves on a chess scoresheet during a tournament game to analyze soon after. The annoying part is you have to record your moves once during the game, and then again into a computer to analyze the moves you played.
On top of this, it’s super easy to keep highly disorganized computer files (keeping track of moves in our minds, unfortunately, doesn’t translate well to keeping track of papers in real life). Instead, we store loose scoresheets in the musty depths of a backpack — crumpled up to oblivion.
Continue reading “Scannable Chess Scoresheets with a Convolutional Neural Network and OpenCV”