Author: Dann Corbit
Date: 10:59:17 08/02/02
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On August 02, 2002 at 05:47:52, K. Burcham wrote: > > >Rxc4 > >In any case, it was a breathtaking move and I still marvel at it more than any >other move I have seen a chess program play. >Dan Corbit > >Dan do we know the Rxc4 line in Junior eval? >I could not get Deep Junior7 to play this move. 2x1533mhz, 12 hours. Only the new contest version plays this line. >Why are you so fascinated by this move when we have not proven this >move is a good sacrifice? have you seen eval change in favour of black with >another program? i have not seen this. I don't know if it is totally sound. It is sound enough to win against a very strong engine. Have you ever analyzed the Evergreen Game with a chess engine? It turns out that one step of the sacrifice chain should simply be removed. (The opponent should refuse the piece). Does that make the sequence less beautiful? The move played by Junior and the total outcome of the game makes it the most beautiful move ever played by any chess engine in my view. Of course, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Some (many) chess engines are prone to stodgy, pawn-grabbing, slow, grinding draws. Junior does not play like that. Simply put, I think the play of Junior is simply fantastic. I like any chess engine that tries to *do* something instead of slowly nibbling in a planless way. That particular move was as great as any move ever made by a GM. And the setup of Junior was sound enough to win the games that it played, so I do not think it can be blamed on wildly speculating extensions. I also think that it is unlikely that Junior could see total compensation for the loss of the piece. In other words, it must have been positional reasons of some kind or structural compensation of some sort that Junior saw. I think it would be nice if Amir/Shay would say something about it. Of course, that is their own business and they should feel no compulsion to talk about it if they don't want to.
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