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How do I use ICC timestamp or FICS timeseal with WinBoard?

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How do I use ICC timestamp or FICS timeseal with WinBoard?

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If you select an ICS from either the WinBoard Startup dialog or the Windows Start submenu that WinBoard installs, WinBoard automatically runs timestamp or timeseal if the ICS you chose is known to support it. If you are constructing a WinBoard command line by hand, add the option “/icshelper timestamp” or “/icshelper timeseal” to the WinBoard command line to use timestamp or timeseal. Both timestamp.exe and timeseal.exe are included in the WinBoard distribution. They both function identically to the Unix versions, as documented in “help timestamp” on ICC and “help timeseal” on FICS. If you have a firewall between your machine and the ICS, see topic [B.19]. If you normally have to use the “/icscomm” command line option on WinBoard to log into a shell account, and then telnet to ICC or FICS from there, you are going to have to run the Unix version of timestamp or timeseal on the shell machine. (If the shell account is not on a Unix machine, you are out of luck.) Get the appropriate versi

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If you select an ICS from either the WinBoard Startup dialog or the Windows Start submenu that WinBoard installs, WinBoard automatically runs timestamp or timeseal if the ICS you chose is known to support it. If you are constructing a WinBoard command line by hand, add the option “/icshelper timestamp” or “/icshelper timeseal” to the WinBoard command line to use timestamp or timeseal. Both timestamp.exe and timeseal.exe are included in the WinBoard distribution. They both function identically to the Unix versions, as documented in “help timestamp” on ICC and “help timeseal” on FICS. If you have a firewall between your machine and the ICS, see topic [D.19] . If you normally have to use the “/icscomm” command line option on WinBoard to log into a shell account, and then telnet to ICC or FICS from there, you are going to have to run the Unix version of timestamp or timeseal on the shell machine. (If the shell account is not on a Unix machine, you are out of luck.) Get the appropriate vers

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