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How I use Chessvision.ai with Lichess, Chessable, Forward Chess and ChessBase

I was a previous subscriber to Chessvision.ai book reader and used it primarily for scanning pdf's and positions that I had seen. I definitely would have benefited from this video if I had seen it earlier to harness the many features of it. I haven't renewed the subscription as to the price change that has happened.

I was a previous subscriber to Chessvision.ai book reader and used it primarily for scanning pdf's and positions that I had seen. I definitely would have benefited from this video if I had seen it earlier to harness the many features of it. I haven't renewed the subscription as to the price change that has happened.

@Sholmes49 said in #3:

is it totally free ?

I discuss pricing at the end of the video.
Originally I used the free version of chessvision.ai (limited use) but then I started to use it so frequently that I bought both subscriptions.
The price of the subscriptions is location-dependent.
I live in the USA and paid $46 for the Mobile app, Chrome extension plus the Video app and $46 for the E-book reader with a bundle discount of $11 for a total of $81 a year.
Players in the USA invest $500-$1000 for a 5-game weekend tournament (food, entry, lodging, travel). I prefer a good chess infrastructure over one weekend tournament.

@Sholmes49 said in #3: > is it totally free ? I discuss pricing at the end of the video. Originally I used the free version of chessvision.ai (limited use) but then I started to use it so frequently that I bought both subscriptions. The price of the subscriptions is location-dependent. I live in the USA and paid $46 for the Mobile app, Chrome extension plus the Video app and $46 for the E-book reader with a bundle discount of $11 for a total of $81 a year. Players in the USA invest $500-$1000 for a 5-game weekend tournament (food, entry, lodging, travel). I prefer a good chess infrastructure over one weekend tournament.

I recently discovered ChessBook.com whose software integrates well with Lichess and it can easily be used to build your opening repertoire using PGN files generated by ChessVision.ai. Alex Crompton recommends it here: (https://AlexroCmpton.com/blog/automatically-creating-a-practical-opening-repertoire-or-why-your-chess-openings-suck). I'd be interested to see your evaluation of ChessBook.com.

I recently discovered ChessBook.com whose software integrates well with Lichess and it can easily be used to build your opening repertoire using PGN files generated by ChessVision.ai. Alex Crompton recommends it here: (https://AlexroCmpton.com/blog/automatically-creating-a-practical-opening-repertoire-or-why-your-chess-openings-suck). I'd be interested to see your evaluation of ChessBook.com.

@Jerry22 said in #5:

I recently discovered ChessBook.com whose software integrates well with Lichess and it can easily be used to build your opening repertoire using PGN files generated by ChessVision.ai. Alex Crompton recommends it here: (AlexroCmpton.com/blog/automatically-creating-a-practical-opening-repertoire-or-why-your-chess-openings-suck). I'd be interested to see your evaluation of ChessBook.com.

I read the blog of Alex Crompton and I have used his philosophy to create my Chessable courses.
Small opening courses with the selection and prioritization of variations based on what club players are most likely to face and with attention to the plans behind the opening and the storylines behind variations.

I write about tools and technology that I like and do not write about products I do not like.
That is the reason I have not written about ChessBook. I wish Marcus Buffet success with his business.

@Jerry22 said in #5: > I recently discovered ChessBook.com whose software integrates well with Lichess and it can easily be used to build your opening repertoire using PGN files generated by ChessVision.ai. Alex Crompton recommends it here: (AlexroCmpton.com/blog/automatically-creating-a-practical-opening-repertoire-or-why-your-chess-openings-suck). I'd be interested to see your evaluation of ChessBook.com. I read the blog of Alex Crompton and I have used his philosophy to create my Chessable courses. Small opening courses with the selection and prioritization of variations based on what club players are most likely to face and with attention to the plans behind the opening and the storylines behind variations. I write about tools and technology that I like and do not write about products I do not like. That is the reason I have not written about ChessBook. I wish Marcus Buffet success with his business.