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Subject: Re: Geniss Axon - a new chess program. Would your program play 15.Nd4?

Author: Will Singleton

Date: 09:30:57 07/18/03

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On July 18, 2003 at 11:40:42, Djordje Vidanovic wrote:

>Hi,
>
>I have some interesting news. A young programmer from my University (the
>University of Nis, Serbia), an electronics engineer, Vladan Vuckovich, has
>created a strong chess program called Geniss Axon. This program had its first
>public tournament against humans the day before yesterday and it won ahead of
>three IMs!  It was a rapid chess event and here is one of the games.  Look at
>the move Nd4 when Geniss sacrificed its Bishop :)
>
>Vladimir has contacted me saying that he has decided to apply for the Leiden
>tournament if something like that is feasible within the Leiden participation
>rules. Therefore I would like to ask some people from the Leiden organisation
>team to tell me what the participation rules are and in case Geniss Axon could
>be admitted to the tournament would there be someone to operate Geniss Axon for
>Vladan (if that is possible too, because I believe that programmers are usually
>required to operate their own programs).  The program is extremely fast (about 2
>million positions per second on my Athlon 2400+) and written in assembler. Just
>like Fritz... It has beaten some commercials several and I saw it beat Crafty as
>well:)  Geniss Axon has been in development since 1997, but it has started
>playing friendly games against humans only last year.
>
>I am attaching a game from the day before yesterday when Geniss Axon beat IM
>Miljkovic (the "atc" stands for the attacking version of Geniss Axon, targeting
>human players).
>
>[Event  ""]
>[Site  "Nis"]
>[Date  "16.7.2003  21:31:24"]
>[Round  " 65003 sec. per move"]
>[White  " Geniss Axon XP ,  v650_atc,  July 16 2003.  "]
>[Black  "Miroslav Miljkovic"]
>[Result  ""]
>[ECO   "B33 Sicilian: Sveshnikov variation  |e=79| "]
>[PlyCount   "77"]
>
>1. e4 c5 2. Ng1-f3 Nb8-c6 3. d4 c:d4 4. Nf3:d4 Ng8-f6 5. Nb1-c3
>e5 6. Nd4-b5 d6 7. Bc1-g5 a6 8. Nb5-a3 b5 9. Bg5:f6 g:f6 10. Nc3-d5
>f5 11. Bf1-d3 Bc8-e6 12. O-O Be6:d5 13. e:d5 Nc6-e7 14. Na3:b5
>e4 15. Nb5-d4 e:d3 16. Rf1-e1 Qd8-a5 17. Qd1:d3 Qa5:d5 18. c4
>Qd5-b7 19. Nd4:f5 O-O-O 20. Nf5:d6+ Rd8:d6 21. Qd3:d6 Qb7-c6
>22. Ra1-d1 Qc6:d6 23. Rd1:d6 Ne7-g6 24. Re1-e8+ Kc7 25. Rd6:a6
>Bf8-g7 26. Re8:h8 Bg7:h8 27. b4 Bh8-d4 28. c5 Ng6-e5 29. Ra6-d6
>Bd4-b2 30. Rd6-d5 Kc6 31. Rd5-d6+ Kc7 32. b5 Bb2-a3 33. Rd6-d5
>f6 34. h4 h5 35. g3 Ba3-b4 36. f4 Ne5-d7 37. c6 Nd7-b6 38. Rd5:h5
>Nb6-c4 39. Rh5-h7+
>
>{ This PGN file was generated by Geniss Axon XP ,  v650_atc,  16. July
>2003.   }
>
>Regards,
>
>Djordje

Since when is a rapid chess event 18 hours per move? :)

Mine won't play Nd4.  I don't see why Nd4 exd3 Re1 dxc2 (not Qa5) is better than
Bc4.

Will



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