Author: George Tsavdaris
Date: 11:52:21 10/12/04
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On October 12, 2004 at 13:11:27, Graham Laight wrote: >On October 12, 2004 at 13:07:22, Omid David Tabibi wrote: > >>On October 12, 2004 at 10:28:16, Graham Laight wrote: >> >>>Hydra seems to be a god-like system in its ability to pick out the profoundly >>>brilliant move. Is it available to play against online anywhere? If ever there >>>was a justification for charging a fee for a game of chess, then Hydra has it in >>>spades! In competition after competition, it just keeps on punching in those >>>brilliant performances. >>> >>>We have also known for many years that Fritz is outstanding - Franz and >>>Mattheius (sp?) have long had a subliminally fast system - but for the past >>>several years, they've also had a strategic system, with quite outstanding >>>positioning skills. For them to equal Hydra's Bilbao score with only a 1.9 GHz >>>processor represents consolidation of their position at the top of the >>>programmers' tree. >>> >>>Then we have Junior - which flopped. What was it doing in the computer team? It >>>was the only computer to get a negative score against the humans - and was well >>>short of what its team-mates achieved (see >>>http://www.ajedrezbilbao.com/cResultadosEN.htm). >>> >>>How does one explain such a poor performance by Junior, which had massively >>>superior hardware to Fritz? Should we ask the Junior programmers to forward >>>their program to to Franz Morsch for advice and improvement? >>> >> >>Reading comments like yours, I come to the conclusion that an Introduction to >>Statistics course should be made mandatory as a prerequisite for joining CCC... > >I obtained a university qualification in statistics 20 years ago (I did an >ancillary in statistics as part of my computing degree). > So why do you conclude so many things, from these few games?
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