
One notable guest was the production director of Infineon Technologies in Dresden,
Thomas Leitermann, who opened the event with an Internet game on the Playchess.com
server. After logging in as "Sachsenforum" Thomas Leitermann took
on the most distant opponent whom we could find in the main playing room.

This is where the two opponents were located during the blitz game. The picture
is taken from the Playchess.com "globe" display which uses NASA satellite
pictures to show where people are located when the play on the server.
The opponent was Christophe in New Zealand, 18,000 Km from Dresden, on the
other side of the globe. In the subsequent chat we learned that Christophe was
a 38-year-old German emigrant who had moved to New Zealand a year ago. He works
in the insurance industry and loves chess, reading (SF and fantasy), dancing,
pubs (auckland has 2000 of them), music and computers.
The ten hours time difference and the globe crossing distance was no problem
for the Playchess.com server. Apparently the Internet signal was going through
ocean cables, since the ping times were less than a second. The game itself
was no different from one between players in two neighbouring German cities.

The game went back and forth, not just across the globe but also strategically.
In the end the player from New Zealand took the point. After that the Sachsenforum
took over, with many young guests trying their hand against opponents thousands
of kms away. In the end they had reached an Elo level of 1800.

Sigrid Kreußel of the Sachsenforum, Thomas Leitermann of Infineon, the
reigning "Miss Sachsenforum", Evgenija Shmirina, Dr Dirk Jordan, GM
Wolfgang Uhlmann.
In the afternoon there were simultaneous exhibitions by legendary GM Wolfgang
Uhlmann, playing ten boards, and 13-year-old European vice champion Evgenija
Shmirina on eight boards. Both played for four hours, and as soon as an opponent
had finished a game a new player to his or her place.

GM Wolfgang Uhlmann playing a simul against visitors. He played a total of
40 games and lost just one by blundering away a rook.

This was only the third time 13-year-old Evgenija Shmirina played a simultaneous
exhibition (she has played some interesting Internet
matches). The president of the Olympic Committee of Saxony, Dr. Jürgen
Löffler (above), was very impressed by the girl. With two extra pawns he
was forced into a repetition and had to conceed a draw. Evgenija lost just two
of 30 games.
Dr. Dirk Jordan Dresden, 21.06.2003