Author: Graham Laight
Date: 03:44:47 06/20/01
Go up one level in this thread
On June 19, 2001 at 21:07:23, Bill Gletsos wrote: >Simply have a single computer program play against 12 different GM's at long >time controls. >Once as white and once as black. >You could calculate its rating as if it would appear on the FIDE rating list. >If it aceived a rating at least a rating of 2500 and also a TPR of 2600 over >those 24 games then you would have an excellent argument that the program is of >GM calibre. > >Provided all 12 GMs above played each other as well then a human meeting the >above criteria would earn the GM title. In fact for the average human he needs a >2600 TPR over 27 games since a valid GM norm can only be obtained in tournaments >of at least 9 rounds and most need 3 GM norms. >Lets relax the condition about the GM's playing amongst themselves because its >not going to happen. > >Currently at long time controls no program has a TPR of 2600 over 24 games. What about Dortmund last year? Not quite the conditions you stipulate - but Deep Junior managed to obtain a rating of 2700. Moreover - IMO, Deep Fritz is significantly better than Deep Junior. -g >FIDE dont need to apporve any of this. Just takes some enterprising chess >programmer to fulfil the above.
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