Author: Enrique Irazoqui
Date: 15:25:14 01/21/01
Go up one level in this thread
On January 21, 2001 at 16:50:50, Peter Berger wrote: >On January 21, 2001 at 11:12:38, Enrique Irazoqui wrote: > >>On January 21, 2001 at 10:30:15, Frederic Friedel wrote: >> >>>Enrique's Cadaqués tournament Round 7 is now up, with lovely accompanying notes >>>by IM Hannu Wegner. >>> >>>http://www.computerschach.de/tourn/cad2001/cad2001.htm >> >>Gandalf is playing this tournament with a broken learner. There are no double >>games, but it keeps playing lines that it doesn't understand well. Soon Steen >>Suurballe will release an update that will take care of the problem. I am pretty >>convinced that without this bug Gandalf would have scored better, as it did >>during the beta period. It's a real pity, among other things because Gandalf's >>playing style is truly attractive. >> >>Enrique > >I don't understand the relevance of this argument at all. > >Isn't Tiger playing with a broken learner , too ? > >If I got it right , the purpose of your tournament is a competition between the >best programs around ; I think you chose worthy opponents although I miss a few >. > >But what if one of the authors said : hey , my king safety values are broken ? >Isn't this just the same as a "broken" learner ? > >In fact I don't think you wanted to say that anyway as it seems you simply >expressed your hope or expectation that the next version of Gandalf will be even >more competitive . Exactly. Gandalf without learning problems would do better. Enrique >But it seems it has become a quite common argument to claim shortcomings on bugs >and I don't think it is fair : bugs and shortcomings are just two sides of the >same medal IMHO . > >Tiger 14 , Gandalf 5, Fritz 7 , Century 4 : they will all be here quite soon and >probably be much stronger than the current versions ; I don't think the progress >made in the meantime should be called a bugfix ;-) > >pete
This page took 0 seconds to execute
Last modified: Thu, 15 Apr 21 08:11:13 -0700
Current Computer Chess Club Forums at Talkchess. This site by Sean Mintz.