Author: walter irvin
Date: 13:29:59 08/08/00
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On August 08, 2000 at 10:33:34, Peter Hegger wrote: >Hello, >This has probably been done to a certain extent already. I'm wondering how the >games of the old masters, i.e. Morphy, Steinitz, Tarrasch etc...stand up under >the scrutiny of today's best computers. Are the games still as clean and >brilliant as they seemed to be a hundred years ago? Or have they been found to >be error ridden relics of days gone by? >I'm wondering in particular about the "evergreen" and the "immortal" games. >Also, Bobby Fischer's "game of the century" against Byrne. >Thanks for any help you can give me. >Best Regards, >Peter i think you will find that the computer almost always out does the master in key positions .computers crush just about all players in tactics . i guess the the big question is could the computer reach a key position vs morphy ect ??????????? i think there are some old masters that had styles that a computer just could not deal with 2 that come to mind are nimzovitch and petrosian .they were masters of the closed position game .i think they would have laughed at computers .on the other hand tactical masters like marshal morphy ect would have got sliced and diced .
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