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Subject: Re: Battle of the Crowns -- current results

Author: José de Jesús García Ruvalcaba

Date: 10:32:27 09/14/00

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On September 14, 2000 at 01:46:31, Dann Corbit wrote:

>On September 13, 2000 at 23:29:49, Bruce Moreland wrote:
>
>>Something I find confusing about this group is that there are a zillion
>>tournaments going on at all times, and if you look at the post titles, it's hard
>>to know if they are tournaments involving computers competing at some site with
>>their authors consent, human tournaments, or championships of someone's
>>basement.
>>
>>As far as I can tell, this is the championship of your basement, right?
>
>It's the *OFFICIAL* world championship of my basement.  Actually, I think it is
>far more relevant than any of those ICCA thingies.  They run so few games that
>the winner is almost a pure crap-shoot.  By running at G/60 and playing 4 games
>for each round robin pairing, we will achieve _actual data_ with _actual
>relevance_ as to the approximate strength of the programs.  Sort of like SSDF,
>but the error bars will be considerably larger.  By the time the contest has
>completed, there will be about 650 games played between the programs in the 4
>crown division, and well over 1000 games overall.
>
>My championship will not carry with it the prestige of the ICCA title, but the
>winner (and even more so the programs that did not win) will know far more about
>the strength of their programs than the data received from any contest with a
>tiny smattering of games by each program, often with only one color against a
>given opponent [or worse yet, with Swiss format affairs -- quite a few opponents
>not even attempted].
>
>I usually have 4 or 5 machines going every night, with 4 games apiece as
>mediated by Winboard.  The machines have to be PII 300 MHz or faster.
>
>Each program gets 32 megs of hash to work with.

	I think it is a matter of taste and preferences. I give much more weight to the
results at tournaments (comp-comp and comp-human) in which the author is
directly involved and chooses the operator, than to privately run tournament and
tests (I respect your work and that of other private testers).
José.



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