Author: Tony Hedlund
Date: 04:49:00 03/29/02
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On March 28, 2002 at 13:32:52, Mike Hood wrote: >On March 28, 2002 at 10:30:02, Daniel Clausen wrote: > >>On March 28, 2002 at 08:34:44, Kurt Utzinger wrote: >> >>>In my opinion, the SSDF people are doing a great job. And be honest: have you >>>ever seen any programs placed at the top of the SSDF-list that did not belong >>>the best ones of the world? >>>Kurt >> >>If we already know which programs belong to the best of the world and which ones >>don't, what's the point of the SSDF again? ;) >> >>(Note: I'm not saying at all the SSDF-guys are doing a bad job. I'm not familiar >>with their testing scenario so I don't have any opinion on this.) >> >>Sargon > >Reading between the lines, I have the impression that the SSDF enters new >programs into the rating pool based on three criteria: > >1. New versions of programs already in the list qualify automatically for >testing. > >2. New programs are "pre-tested". ie, they play a small number of games with a >new program; if the results look reasonable, they give it a full test of >hundreds of games; if it plays abysmally, they don't waste their time. This doesn't happend. Tony >3. Here's the crunch; since the SSDF is a voluntary organization which doesn't >pay salaries, they're unable to buy every chess program on the market. They >don't test a new program unless the author and/or publisher of the program sends >them a free copy. > >Actually, there's a fourth criteria, cloesely related to the third. Certain >primadonnas out there say "I don't want my program to be tested unless I can be >at the top of the list. So don't include my program in the list!" If you're one >of these people, I hope you're reading this message, because it's people like >you who weaken the value of the SSDF list.
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