Author: Rolf Tueschen
Date: 01:34:21 10/20/02
Go up one level in this thread
On October 19, 2002 at 14:58:28, Janosch Zwerensky wrote:
>
>>Humans have to learn and memorize the best lines for openings.
>
>So do chess programs, except that the hardware they run on is better suited to
>memorizing facts than is the human brain.
>If you want to play without precomputed opening theory, I'd suggest you do
>shuffle chess.
>
>Regards,
>Janosch
That remains wrong also if it's repeated all over again. Chess programs do _not_
learn and memorize. Fritz played what had been excerpted & copied & pasted from
GM (old!) theory by Kure (!) ("a famous chess theory copy&paste analyst"). We
could see the effect of "learning" in the first 4 games of the show event. So
far about learning. And since when copy&paste is called memorizing? -
Ok, if you pay me 1 million dollars I will admit the contrary for a couple of
days... (Bahrain mode ON)
Rolf Tueschen
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