Computer Chess Club Archives


Search

Terms

Messages

Subject: The Tweakers & Twisters in CC please do come back to chess (Appeal 2)

Author: Rolf Tueschen

Date: 02:33:33 10/11/02

Go up one level in this thread


On October 10, 2002 at 22:48:19, Robert Hyatt wrote:


>I never said he was doing that, and hope I never implied I thought he was.  He
>simply has found weaknesses that lead to predictable play in particular types of
>positions, whatever they may be.  The rules prevent _any_ changes to the program
>excepting for the opening book, and changing the opening book would only be an
>attempt at dodging around a problem rather than doing something to change the
>basic way the program behaves...

To me it seems that you are here on the same error than in SSDF statistics and
Elo. The pattern I discovered is this, you can't accept that certain things
can't be done! And then your reaction is _not_ to support a general change in
the approach, but you say "the approach, how we always did it in the past, is
correct and if human players won't accept _our_ tradition, then bad for them,
_we_ simply won't play".
Let me speak it out. You'd hate to lose the possibility to tweak and twist, so
that you could always confuse a human chess player. Because that is no longer
about _chess_ but about gambling and psyching out the human player.
This is most ridiculous because you yourself are the expert for the whole topic
of CC who is never tired to explain that chess programs are not yet as strong as
human GM players. But instead of accepting the truth in its complete meaning you
are completely out of your mind the moment you are fantazising a match where
Crafty or Cray Blitz could be involved. In short: split interests.



>Yes it [Crafty] has weaknesses.  But _not_ the same
>weaknesses as Fritz.  It understands a lot about majorities, candidates, pawns
>on wings, etc...  Enough that it would take him time to discover what it didn't
>understand, and he only has _eight_ games to do that...  Not enough with me
>tweaking between rounds to keep things off-balance.


You couldn't give a more honest confession. I think the hype about DB2 is only
understandable with that confession. In that light your statement that Kasparov
should simply have managed to get a better contract is in itself untrue! Because
for IBM/Hsu and you yourself the tweaking in little show events is the main
remedy to calm your own, your collegues and the many lovers of CC _conscience_.
All know exactly that no machine could become dangerous for a human GM in a fair
match. Your only chance is the tweaking and twisting, I would call it the
psyching out mode, or the confusional mode.




>The problem is, he has found a "style" of play that minimizes his chances for
>errors, because he has found that without queens, a program that relies on
>aggressive
>play suddenly becomes clueless when the attacking chances are not present.  And
>he
>_knows_ that before he starts the match.  Were this my program, he would not
>because
>I simply would not have agreed to such a ridiculous set of rules.  Of course, he
>would
>never play Crafty anyway because he wanted those rules and I would never have
>agreed to them, so end of match before it could get started...

That was confession Part II.

If your machine is weaker than  GM then you are not ready yet to give up all
hopes. No, then you either try to tweak and twist or you deny a match at all. Or
you dismantle the whole machine after 6 games only... Hsu and Bob are well in
the same boat here. Really? Isit all about gambling? I thought it were about
chess.





>Not even close.  Kasparov complained because deep blue seemed to "change".  In
>one
>game it seemed to evaluate bishops too high, in the next, not high enough.  That
>is enough
>to disrupt a plan, and if you only have 8 games to develop a plan, I believe he
>would have
>a _much_ harder time.  Yes, I believe he would win.  He might even win with the
>same
>margin of victory.  But he would definitely have to "work" for the victories,
>rather than
>using pre-obtained knowledge to steer the program into never-never land with
>little
>chance of anything bad happening at all.


It is very painful to read you here. It's so mean and average (as if Kramnik
would not show real chess, but only genral preppy stuff). Here we are talking
about a chess master, an artist, and there we have the tweaker & twister. Who is
playing God. Just by some primitive gambling tricks.You seem to have no respect
for the artistic mastership of human chess GM! No matter what you say on
different occasions. I know! You will quote thousands of different phrases. But
as in the question of SSDF,you simply can't understand that you can't follow two
different choices. One could only be true! Either something is true or wrong.
And if something is wrong then you can't define it as the practical best. Try to
implement as many code you like where your program may gamble, but stop to
gamble yourself.


Excuse me, but do not think for a second that I would tell you such thoughts if
I were thinking that you are lost in such debates. Certain ideas must simply be
expressed to become new and acceptable even for such dinos like you.

Rolf Tueschen



This page took 0.01 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.