Author: Dann Corbit
Date: 15:49:37 07/31/01
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On July 31, 2001 at 18:36:53, Otello Gnaramori wrote: ><snip> >Franz Morsch saying the main difference between this version of Fritz compared >to its predecessors did not lie so much in greater chess knowledge but more due >to the machines newfound ability to deal with anti-computer chess strategy, and >to learn from its mistakes. He also said that he believed that this incarnation >of Fritz is every bit as strong as the Deep Blue II that defeated Kasparov and >has far greater "chess knowledge". ><snip> For a machine with many thousands of tunable chess parameters, carefully adjusted by teams of programmers and GM's and which could prompt the strongest chess player of all time, Garry Kasparov, to say: "NO MACHINE CAN MAKE THAT MOVE!" If Fritz is just as good, with a 100x speed penalty, it must be pretty good. >Good to say that...:) > >Regards.
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