Author: Robert Henry Durrett
Date: 04:48:54 05/18/02
Go up one level in this thread
On May 17, 2002 at 21:08:20, martin fierz wrote: >On May 17, 2002 at 18:51:47, Robert Henry Durrett wrote: > >>I hope you will forgive me if I lack diplomacy. I never was good at that. >> >>It was not I who reopened an old can of worms. It was GM Ilya Smirin. >> >>The essence of my recent posts is to say that I was hoping that his observations >>about how the chess engines performed would be discussed here. So far, nothing. >> I was merely trying to prompt someone to address the GM's concerns. > >there is a good reason that there is no response to smirin's statements: what he >said is just common knowledge here. if i remember right, it was about this: >- computers are great in open positions >- computers are weak in closed positions >- computers have no long-range planning capabilities. >this is *really old* stuff! it has been this way all the time, and will probably >be this way for a long time to come... > >aloha > martin Thanks, Martin, for a courteous, straightforward and honest answer to my question. Your comments that "this is common knowledge here" and "this is *really old* stuff" have a ring of truth about them. They certainly explain why noone addressed Smirin's observations about the chess engine he was playing against. I have been going thru the archived files in search of earlier discussions of this topic and have not yet found them. I am still looking. If you remember any of that, I would appreciate your help in locating them. If the files I'm looking for are REALLY old, then one must wonder whether or not there has been any recent progress made in finding the solutions to these "really old" technical problems. But perhaps people will not present their new stuff here because they are already "burned out" on this topic.
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.