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Subject: Re: Moderation of CCC - pretty ineffective and therefore useless

Author: Robert Hyatt

Date: 07:32:08 12/03/00

Go up one level in this thread


On December 03, 2000 at 09:38:05, Ritter Rost wrote:

>On December 03, 2000 at 03:37:40, Gregor Overney wrote:
>
>>I can read commercials about buying computers at CCC, political discussions
>>about a countries elections, and tons of people publishing their results about
>>engine vs. engine on a single CPU. Well, those "limited" engine vs. engine posts
>>might just be acceptable, but the others are definitely not suitable for this
>>group.
>>
>>Either we get rid of moderators or they start doing their job. CCC is not
>>getting faster by adding messages that are absolutely not related to CCC.
>>
>>BTW, why do I not like engine vs. engine wars running on the same CPU? Some
>>chess programs rely on extremely fast searches. Other rely more on clever
>>evaluation functions and search much less nodes. For the first type of engines,
>>frequent cache flashes are a much harder penalty than for those engines that do
>>not search a la brute force. So, if you have the need to test your engine, but
>>you have only one CPU available, try some free chess server to compete with
>>others. Otherwise, give those engines a change to "maxout" their performance on
>>a "undisturbed" CPU. A dual CPU system is more or less acceptable. - And use two
>>identical systems since a comparison of Crafty running on PII/300 compared to a
>>run on PowerPC 400 MHz does not provide too much useful input. If you just want
>>to find out how your system compares, check out SpecINT2000 since it contains
>>Crafty as one of its test programs (see
>>http://www.spec.org/osg/cpu2000/CINT2000/186.crafty/docs/186.crafty.html).
>>
>>Gregor
>
>
>The level of personal attacks in CCC has never been as low as under the current
>moderation.
>
>A lively group needs a lively discussion culture to maintain some social
>coherence. Since its so difficult to conduct a meaningful discussion about
>computer chess if you aren't a programmer (see the "new paradigm idiocy") or if
>you aren't a chess player, contribution possibilities are reduced to mere boring
>bean counting.
>
>So a little off topic here and there helps the sanity of this forum.


I tend to agree.  I simply "self-moderate" topics I am not interested in, by
just not reading them.  Some off-topic threads are interesting.  As long as
they don't go on forever, nor cause complaints.



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