Author: Uri Blass
Date: 22:08:20 04/07/01
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On April 08, 2001 at 00:51:41, Christophe Theron wrote: >On April 07, 2001 at 23:31:18, Uri Blass wrote: > >>On April 07, 2001 at 18:25:44, robert flesher wrote: >> >>>Hello everyone i downloaded Chess Genius 2 last night. >> >>Do you mean to the Dos version or to 2.016? >> >> I must say that anyone >>>who likes genius this is a must. I find the interface that comes with Shredder >>>is rather poor with a slow mouse response. However this interface is fast and >>>simple. For strength i tested it Against good old hiarcs 7.01 30 min each. I >>>expected Hiarcs to destroy genius as this is a old program. After Three games 1 >>>draw two wins for genius. You can imagine my shock. >> >>Did you use one computer for the test. >> >>I ask because I have doubts about tests on one computer because one program may >>be slowed down by a significant factor. >> >> >> I know everyone This is not >>>enough to draw hasty conclusions, although it shows that even old GENIUS2 can >>>hold its own to newer commercial programs. Maybe this shouldnt come as a >>>surprise as it was this same program that beat Kasparov himself in in 1994 at an >>>intel speed tournement. >> >>No >>Genius2.9 that is almost identical to Genius3 won kasparov in 1994. >> >>Kasparov was wrong to think that he is playing Genius2 and I guess that this is >>the reason that he lost. > > > >This kind of reasonning is a mystery to me. > >Can you explain to me why Kasparov (or somebody else) is supposed to have no >problem if it is a known program, and be totally disturbed if it is a slightly >improved version? The question is if it was only slightly improved version. It is possible that kasparov could win Genius2 easily at home because of some positional weakness that was corrected in Genius3. > >Do you think that a human can prepare against all the possible chess positions >if he has the opportunity to test the program? > >Are you going to say that it is a matter of opening preparation? In this case, >do you believe that Lang is so stupid that he would have played with the same >book as the commercial version? I do not say it but it is possible that kasparov knew Ganius2 and expected it to play some kind of mistake that Genius3 knew not to do. It is possible that kasparov did not play the best move in a position that is not in theory because he expected Genius to blunder. Uri
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