Author: Fernando Villegas
Date: 10:52:13 04/03/02
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As other guy said, great ramble, pal! Now, Maybe it could interest you to know that in some instances there is, in some people, not only no inclination to spot after long work the weak poinst of computers, but all the contrary. I, in a high degree, developped that contrary inclination in the 80's, when playing Ches Champion Challenger, a 1700 or so machine. In those years to get one of those machines was an expensive adventure and, at the same time, if you was a relatively experienced player, you tended to be best player than the machine. So, as much as you expended so much money for getting fun and it would disappear if you get more than certain reasonable level of wins, my inclination was not to spot and even more, not to memorize weakness that could become evident in a game, but to forget them in oder to keep the fun. That perhaps curious atitude developped in m all style of playing chess against computers. Were they weak in opennings? Then I did not try to learn opennings in order to compel mysef to examine the game from the beginning. Were they weak in endings? The same thing in order to keep the fun. In other words, this is just a variation of the universal perception that a game is over if ever is solved. In my case, the fun is over if I get a tool to overcome computers as a matter of act. For the same reason I am not interested to learn nothing of the so called "anticomputer strategies" . My goal is to play and think, because thinking is the pleasure. Specially if you think from zero. Each game must be, for me, an entirely new event. ell, just my experience. Now I return to my task to invent the wheel.... My best Fernando
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