Author: Uri Blass
Date: 11:02:59 05/09/02
Go up one level in this thread
On May 09, 2002 at 13:47:18, José Carlos wrote:
>On May 09, 2002 at 13:42:20, Uri Blass wrote:
>
>>On May 09, 2002 at 13:07:47, José Carlos wrote:
>>
>>>On May 09, 2002 at 12:43:48, Uri Blass wrote:
>>>
>>>>On May 09, 2002 at 12:09:00, José Carlos wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>On May 09, 2002 at 08:05:27, Vine Smith wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>>On May 09, 2002 at 07:15:24, Uri Blass wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>On May 09, 2002 at 06:46:45, Vine Smith wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>On May 09, 2002 at 06:17:15, Uri Blass wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>On May 09, 2002 at 06:04:57, Vine Smith wrote:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>On May 09, 2002 at 03:02:52, Slater Wold wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>[D]8/8/8/3Q3k/p2p1q2/P2P4/6K1/8 b - - 0 71
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>This is from a game I played last nite against Crafty 18.14. I was using Deep
>>>>>>>>>>>Junior 7.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>I am unsure what the other guy was using (HW), although I know it was an SMP
>>>>>>>>>>>system. No idea about TBs, or anything like that. I have over 20GB of TBs,
>>>>>>>>>>>3/4/5 and a lot of 6's.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>Here is the entire game:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>Crafty 18.14 - Deep Junior 7 [A29]
>>>>>>>>>>>(2), 08.05.2002
>>>>>>>>>>>[-0.12]
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> 128MB, jbook.ctg
>>>>>>>>>>> 1.c4 Nf6 2.Nc3 e5 3.Nf3 Nc6 4.g3 d5 5.cxd5 Nxd5 6.Bg2 Nb6 7.0-0 Be6 last book
>>>>>>>>>>>move -0.12/15 9 8.d3 (Qc2) 8...f6 2054kN/s -0.05/15 8 9.Be3 Nd4 2268kN/s
>>>>>>>>>>>-0.06/16 4 10.Nh4 (Rc1) 10...g5 1924kN/s -0.11/14 6 11.Nf3 c6 2174kN/s
>>>>>>>>>>>0.00/14 0 12.Ne4 g4 2152kN/s 0.19/15 6 13.Nxd4 exd4 2016kN/s 0.00/16 0
>>>>>>>>>>>14.Bf4 (Bd2) 14...Nd5 1921kN/s -0.02/16 6 15.Bd2 (Qd2) 15...Rg8 2055kN/s
>>>>>>>>>>>0.09/14 8 16.Rc1 Qb6 2188kN/s 0.00/16 0 17.Qa4 (b4) 17...a5 2048kN/s
>>>>>>>>>>>0.13/14 6 18.a3 f5 2393kN/s -0.08/15 2 19.Ng5 Bd7 2324kN/s 0.00/15 0
>>>>>>>>>>>20.b4 (Nf7) 20...Bh6 2301kN/s -0.19/13 15 21.f4 gxf3 2222kN/s -0.18/14 0
>>>>>>>>>>>22.Nxf3 Be3+ 2349kN/s -0.22/14 8 23.Bxe3 (Kh1) 23...Nxe3 2014kN/s -0.37/12
>>>>>>>>>>>3 24.Rf2 f4 2619kN/s -0.33/14 3 25.gxf4 (Rc5) 25...Bh3 2673kN/s -0.81/13 9
>>>>>>>>>>> 26.Ne1 Qd8 2779kN/s -0.51/14 13 27.Qb3 (Rc5) 27...Rg6 2880kN/s -0.64/13 17
>>>>>>>>>>> 28.Rc5 (f5) 28...a4 2781kN/s -0.67/12 9 29.Qa2 Qf6 2806kN/s -0.66/13 14
>>>>>>>>>>>30.Rg5 (b5) 30...Be6 2238kN/s -0.46/15 16 31.Rxg6 Qxg6 2227kN/s -0.59/15 11
>>>>>>>>>>> 32.Qd2 (Qb2) 32...Bd5 2270kN/s -0.49/16 24 33.f5 Qg4 2529kN/s -0.27/16 20
>>>>>>>>>>>34.b5 0-0-0 2814kN/s -0.21/14 7 35.Qa5 (bxc6) 35...Rg8 2948kN/s -0.62/13 7
>>>>>>>>>>>36.bxc6 (Qa8+) 36...Bxc6 2885kN/s -0.15/14 23 37.Qc5 (Qe5) 37...Qg5 2636kN/s
>>>>>>>>>>>-0.55/14 7 38.Nf3 Qg7 2690kN/s -0.60/14 1 39.Ne1 Qf6 2500kN/s 0.00/16 0
>>>>>>>>>>>40.Nf3 h5 2564kN/s -0.75/15 0 41.h4 (Kh1) 41...Rg3 2683kN/s -0.47/13 6
>>>>>>>>>>>42.Kh2 Rg7 2734kN/s -0.45/14 0 43.Bh3 Ng4+ 2351kN/s -0.20/15 0 44.Bxg4
>>>>>>>>>>>hxg4 2413kN/s -0.49/15 4 45.Ng5 Rxg5 2568kN/s -0.14/15 14 46.hxg5 Qxg5
>>>>>>>>>>>2699kN/s -0.23/15 8 47.Kg1 g3 2802kN/s -0.28/16 8 48.Rg2 Qe3+ 2526kN/s
>>>>>>>>>>>-0.52/16 22 49.Kf1 Kd7 3054kN/s 0.00/17 24 50.Rxg3 (Qc4) 50...Qf4+ 2399kN/s
>>>>>>>>>>> -0.67/14 3 51.Rf3 Bxf3 2273kN/s 0.00/15 0 52.exf3 Qxf3+ 2139kN/s 0.00/15
>>>>>>>>>>>0 53.Kg1 Qg3+ 2184kN/s -0.37/14 2 54.Kh1 Qd6 2666kN/s -0.11/14 20 55.Qa7
>>>>>>>>>>>(Qb5+) 55...Qh6+ 2006kN/s -0.37/14 4 56.Kg2 (Kg1) 56...Qd2+ 2173kN/s
>>>>>>>>>>>-0.37/14 3 57.Kg1 Qe3+ 2338kN/s -0.37/15 0 58.Kg2 (Kh1) 58...Qg5+ 2401kN/s
>>>>>>>>>>>-0.07/14 9 59.Kh2 Qh4+ 2340kN/s -0.07/14 4 60.Kg2 Qg4+ 2334kN/s 0.00/16 0
>>>>>>>>>>> 61.Kh2 (Kh1) 61...Qe2+ 2860kN/s 0.00/15 20 62.Kg1 (Kh1) 62...Qd1+ 2315kN/s
>>>>>>>>>>>0.06/13 2 63.Kf2 Qc2+ 2867kN/s 0.00/14 0 64.Ke1 (Kg1) 64...Qc1+ 2631kN/s
>>>>>>>>>>>0.00/12 4 65.Kf2 Qf4+ 2656kN/s 0.00/13 0 66.Kg2 Ke7 2760kN/s 0.00/15 0
>>>>>>>>>>>67.Qxb7+ Kf6 2193kN/s #1/16 0 68.Qc6+ (Qe4) 68...Kxf5 1880kN/s 0.00/16 8
>>>>>>>>>>>69.Qc8+ Kg6 1704kN/s 0.00/17 13 70.Qg8+ Kh5 1559kN/s #1/18 0 71.Qd5+
>>>>>>>>>>>(Qh8+) 71...Qg5+ 2119kN/s 0.00/18 2 72.Qxg5+ Kxg5 0kN/s 0.00/3 0 73.Kg3
>>>>>>>>>>>Kf5 398kN/s #20/62 0 74.Kf3 Ke5 93kN/s #20/62 0 75.Kg4 Kd5 1135kN/s
>>>>>>>>>>>#20/61 0 76.Kf4 Kc5 1792kN/s #20/61 0 77.Ke5 Kc6 1521kN/s #20/62 0
>>>>>>>>>>>78.Kxd4 Kd6 #20/1 0 79.Kc4 Kc6 #18/1 0 80.Kb4 Kd5 #17/1 0 81.Kxa4 Kc5
>>>>>>>>>>>#16/1 0 82.Ka5 Kc6 #16/1 0 83.d4 Kd5 #14/1 0 84.Kb6 Kxd4 #13/1 0
>>>>>>>>>>>85.a4 Kc4 #12/1 0 86.a5 Kd5 #11/1 0 87.a6 Kc4 #10/1 0 88.a7 Kd4 #9/1
>>>>>>>>>>>0 89.a8Q Ke3 #9/1 0 90.Qf8 Ke4 #7/1 0 91.Kc6 Kd3 #6/1 0 92.Qf3+ Kd2
>>>>>>>>>>>#5/1 0 93.Kd5 Ke1 #4/1 0 94.Qg2 Kd1 #4/1 0 95.Kd4 Kc1 #2/1 0 96.Kc3
>>>>>>>>>>>Kb1 #1/1 0 97.Qb2# 1-0
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>And PGN:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>[Event "FICS rated blitz game"]
>>>>>>>>>>>[Site "FICS, Fremont, California USA"]
>>>>>>>>>>>[Date "2002.05.08"]
>>>>>>>>>>>[Time "00:42:28"]
>>>>>>>>>>>[Round "-"]
>>>>>>>>>>>[White "tjfritz"]
>>>>>>>>>>>[Black "Project"]
>>>>>>>>>>>[WhiteElo "2450"]
>>>>>>>>>>>[BlackElo "2579"]
>>>>>>>>>>>[TimeControl "300+5"]
>>>>>>>>>>>[Mode "ICS"]
>>>>>>>>>>>[Result "1-0"]
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>1. c4 Nf6 2. Nc3 e5 3. Nf3 Nc6 4. g3 d5 5. cxd5 Nxd5 6. Bg2 Nb6 7. O-O Be6
>>>>>>>>>>>8. d3 f6 9. Be3 Nd4 10. Nh4 g5 11. Nf3 c6 12. Ne4 g4 13. Nxd4 exd4 14. Bf4
>>>>>>>>>>>Nd5 15. Bd2 Rg8 16. Rc1 Qb6 17. Qa4 a5 18. a3 f5 19. Ng5 Bd7 20. b4 Bh6
>>>>>>>>>>>21. f4 gxf3 22. Nxf3 Be3+ 23. Bxe3 Nxe3 24. Rf2 f4 25. gxf4 Bh3 26. Ne1
>>>>>>>>>>>Qd8 27. Qb3 Rg6 28. Rc5 a4 29. Qa2 Qf6 30. Rg5 Be6 31. Rxg6 Qxg6 32. Qd2
>>>>>>>>>>>Bd5 33. f5 Qg4 34. b5 O-O-O 35. Qa5 Rg8 36. bxc6 Bxc6 37. Qc5 Qg5 38. Nf3
>>>>>>>>>>>Qg7 39. Ne1 Qf6 40. Nf3 h5 41. h4 Rg3 42. Kh2 Rg7 43. Bh3 Ng4+ 44. Bxg4
>>>>>>>>>>>hxg4 45. Ng5 Rxg5 46. hxg5 Qxg5 47. Kg1 g3 48. Rg2 Qe3+ 49. Kf1 Kd7 50. Rxg3
>>>>>>>>>>>Qf4+ 51. Rf3 Bxf3 52. exf3 Qxf3+ 53. Kg1 Qg3+ 54. Kh1 Qd6 55. Qa7 Qh6+ 56. Kg2
>>>>>>>>>>>Qd2+ 57. Kg1 Qe3+ 58. Kg2 Qg5+ 59. Kh2 Qh4+ 60. Kg2 Qg4+ 61. Kh2 Qe2+ 62. Kg1
>>>>>>>>>>>Qd1+ 63. Kf2 Qc2+ 64. Ke1 Qc1+ 65. Kf2 Qf4+ 66. Kg2 Ke7 67. Qxb7+ Kf6 68. Qc6+
>>>>>>>>>>>Kxf5 69. Qc8+ Kg6 70. Qg8+ Kh5 71. Qd5+ Qg5+ 72. Qxg5+ Kxg5 73. Kg3 Kf5
>>>>>>>>>>>74. Kf3 Ke5 75. Kg4 Kd5 76. Kf4 Kc5 77. Ke5 Kc6 78. Kxd4 Kd6 79. Kc4 Kc6
>>>>>>>>>>>80. Kb4 Kd5 81. Kxa4 Kc5 82. Ka5 Kc6 83. d4 Kd5 84. Kb6 Kxd4 85. a4 Kc4
>>>>>>>>>>>86. a5 Kd5 87. a6 Kc4 88. a7 Kd4 89. a8=Q Ke3 90. Qf8 Ke4 91. Kc6 Kd3 92. Qf3+
>>>>>>>>>>>Kd2 93. Kd5 Ke1 94. Qg2 Kd1 95. Kd4 Kc1 96. Kc3 Kb1 97. Qb2#
>>>>>>>>>>>{Black checkmated} 1-0
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>This is obviously some kind of bug in Junior, possibly induced by lack of time
>>>>>>>>>>to "think".
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>I do not think that it is a bug.
>>>>>>>>>It is a typical computer mistake.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>computers do not understand that the pawn endgame is lost before trading queens
>>>>>>>>>Tablebases cannot help much here because if they can see that white win a pawn
>>>>>>>>>they will not let trade queens but winning the pawn is too deep for them to see
>>>>>>>>>because of typical bad search rules(they considers the line Qg5+ Qxg5 Kxg5 only
>>>>>>>>>for a very short time) and before winning the pawn the position seems to be
>>>>>>>>>better for black because the black pawns are more advanced then the white pawns
>>>>>>>>>and the black king is also closer to the cntre of the board.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>Uri
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>Junior's file shows that it looked 18 ply ahead when selecting 71...Qg5+? The
>>>>>>>>pawn on d4 was lost 14 ply later. So which of the very obvious king advances by
>>>>>>>>White did it prune out of the search, and why would that not represent a bug,
>>>>>>>>meaning unintended behavior by the program?
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>Regards,
>>>>>>>>Vine
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>Junior depth does not mean plies.
>>>>>>>depth 18 of Junior means only 9 plies of brute force depth.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>There are rare cases when Junior cannot see simple tactics when this is not a
>>>>>>>question of time but this does not seem to be one of thee cases because if you
>>>>>>>give Junior to play at long time control(for example 10 hours/20 moves) then
>>>>>>>Junior can fail low at depth 21.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>I did not wait to see how much time it needs to find Kh4 and maybe someone with
>>>>>>>faster hardware can do it.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>Uri
>>>>>>
>>>>>>Faster hardware is not necessary. On my Celeron 433, Junior 7 takes a disgusting
>>>>>>4 minutes and 15 seconds to both see something is wrong with Qg5+ and change to
>>>>>>moving the king. On this same machine, some other much better times:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>Phalanx XXII: 3 seconds to see the pawn on d4 falling, 25 seconds to move the
>>>>>>king though with no draw score
>>>>>>Pharaon 2.35 (an old beta): 9 seconds to see both that Qg5+ loses and to move
>>>>>>the king with a draw score
>>>>>>Yace 0.99.57: 12 seconds to see that Qg5+ is kind of bad (like -.8 or something)
>>>>>>and move the king (don't recall if it gave a draw score)
>>>>>>Fritz 6: 15 seconds with details like Yace above
>>>>>>A huge host of other Winboard engines: 20-40 seconds to move the king
>>>>>>Some good engines that took longer: Little Goliath 3.5, Nejmet 3.05
>>>>>
>>>>> You're right, the position is very easy for chess programs. This is Averno's
>>>>>output without EGTB's:
>>>>>
>>>>>Averno v0.43c
>>>>>(c) 1999-2002 Jose Carlos Martinez Galan
>>>>>
>>>>>go
>>>>>Tiempo esperado: 67108863
>>>>>
>>>>>Prof Eval Tiempo Nodos PV
>>>>>---- ---- ------ --------- ------
>>>>>1 0.00 0.00 10 f4g5
>>>>>1 0.06 0.00 18 h5g4!
>>>>>1 0.06 0.00 18 h5g4
>>>>>1 0.06 0.00 21--h5g4
>>>>>2 -0.19 0.00 86 h5g4?
>>>>>2 -1.12 0.00 137 h5g4 d5d7
>>>>>2 -0.86 0.00 170 f4g5!
>>>>>2 -0.20 0.00 186 f4g5!
>>>>>2 -0.20 0.00 186 f4g5 d5g5
>>>>>2 0.00 0.00 279 h5h4!
>>>>>2 0.00 0.00 279 h5h4 d5a5
>>>>>2 0.00 0.00 350--h5h4 d5a5
>>>>>3 0.00 0.00 762 h5h4 d5f3 f4e5
>>>>>3 0.00 0.00 979--h5h4 d5f3 f4e5
>>>>>4 -0.20 0.00 1994 h5h4 d5d8 f4g5 d8g5
>>>>>4 -0.20 0.00 2980--h5h4 d5d8 f4g5 d8g5
>>>>>5 0.00 0.00 5102 h5h4 d5d8 f4g5 d8g5 h4g5
>>>>>5 0.00 0.00 7891--h5h4 d5d8 f4g5 d8g5 h4g5
>>>>>6 0.00 0.00 14461 h5h4 d5d8 f4g5 d8g5 h4g5 g2g1
>>>>>6 0.00 0.00 20294--h5h4 d5d8 f4g5 d8g5 h4g5 g2g1
>>>>>7 0.00 0.00 40068 h5h4 d5d8 f4g5 d8g5 h4g5 g2g1 g5h6
>>>>>7 0.00 0.00 71147--h5h4 d5d8 f4g5 d8g5 h4g5 g2g1 g5h6
>>>>>8 0.00 0.00 130826 h5h4 d5d8 f4g5 d8g5 h4g5 g2g1 g5h6 g1h2
>>>>>8 0.00 0.00 212441--h5h4 d5d8 f4g5 d8g5 h4g5 g2g1 g5h6 g1h2
>>>>>9 0.00 0.00 412463 h5h4 d5d8 f4g5 d8g5 h4g5 g2g1 g5h6 g1h2
>>>>> h6h5
>>>>>9 0.00 1.00 714498--h5h4 d5d8 f4g5 d8g5 h4g5 g2g1 g5h6 g1h2
>>>>> h6h5
>>>>>10 0.00 2.00 1410136 h5h4 d5d8 f4g5 d8g5 h4g5 g2g1 g5h6 g1h2
>>>>> h6h5 h2g2
>>>>>10 0.00 4.00 2307904--h5h4 d5d8 f4g5 d8g5 h4g5 g2g1 g5h6 g1h2
>>>>> h6h5 h2g2
>>>>>11 0.00 8.00 4438241 h5h4 d5d8 f4g5 d8g5 h4g5 g2g1 g5h6 g1h2
>>>>> h6h5 h2g2 h5g4
>>>>>11 0.00 14.00 7337964--h5h4 d5d8 f4g5 d8g5 h4g5 g2g1 g5h6 g1h2
>>>>> h6h5 h2g2 h5g4
>>>>>
>>>>> As you can see, at ply 2 Qg5+ is refused, probably because of this line: Qg5+
>>>>>Qxg5+ Kxg5 Kg3 (though it only prints two moves in the PV). I don't know the
>>>>>name in english for this position of the kings (Kg3 vs Kg5) but I think every
>>>>>program knows this is bad for the side to move.
>>>>>
>>>>> José C.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>I think that the most important knowledge for amateurs is search knowledge and
>>>>the proof is that a lot of program without that knowledge are clearly better
>>>>than Averno.
>>>
>>> Names please?
>>>
>>> José C.
>>
>>Junior has not the relevant knowledge ans the same for crafty or yace that find
>>that Qxg5 is bad only thanks to search.
>
> Crafty and YACE don't know about opposition? Hard to believe.
> Anyway, your "proof" is not very good when you say "a lot" and can only name
>two, without knowing for sure if the knowledge is there or not.
>
>>I did not check more programs but it seems that almost nothing can see based on
>>2 plies search that Qg5+ is better for white.
>
> Of course it can, with the right knowledge.
>
> José C.
I talked about what programs that are available today can do and not about the
future programs and the programs that I checked are good programs.
Uri
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