Author: Scott Gasch
Date: 13:39:00 10/09/02
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On October 09, 2002 at 15:52:28, George Sobala wrote: >On October 09, 2002 at 15:49:41, liam hearns wrote: > >>well is to be , Kramnick the destroyer,Kramnick the spoil sport,Kramnick the >>fox,or simply Kramnick the great? He is proving one thing and that is without >>its enormous database of book knowledge chess computers have not improved much >>over the years.Is it back to the drawing board chaps? > >Actually I foresee problems. A human opponent trailing by so much at this stage >would be demoralised, and play below his usual strength. Fritz has no such >psychological problems: if Kramnik "eases up" in the next game feeling it is >getting too easy, he may get a nasty tactical surprise along the way. Here's my take on all of this, for what it's worth. Kramnik will have no problem finishing off Fritz -- Fritz has neither the knowledge nor the raw speed to compete with super GMs and this is the reason it loses. Add to this the fact the Kramnik was able to prepare by playing practice games vs. Fritz and finding out what the engine does well / badly and you have the machine at a grave disadvantage. Deep Blue was a much faster searcher and may or may not have had more evaluation knowledge. In my opinion the win over Kasparov was a fluke caused by a few factors: 1. poor play by GK (in game 2 he resigns a drawn position, in game 6 he bungles the opening), 2. lack of oppertunity for Kasparov to prepare -- he has no idea what to expect. Was Deep Blue an impressive machine and great achievement? Yes. Could it have consistently beaten the super GMs at slow games? I do not think so. And if neither can anything we have today. Scott
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