Computer Chess Club Archives


Search

Terms

Messages

Subject: Re: A Experiment

Author: Richard Pijl

Date: 04:44:26 03/17/03

Go up one level in this thread


On March 16, 2003 at 18:08:01, Eduard Nemeth wrote:

>At noon today I played an experimental game beside my lunch against a modern
>program!!!!!  After move 75 (!) the following position developed:
>
>Eduard vs. Program x  (Level was 15'+10")
>
>[D]3r4/2p2bk1/npr4p/p3p3/P2pP1pP/1P1P1pP1/1RPK1P2/R1N4B w - - 0 1
>
>I has (because like said only a Experimanet) it intentionally certified that my
>Bishop is locked up.  Besides my Knight has also hardly playable moves.  Oh,
>also after that 75. Move, all 16 Pawns do not stand for moves on the board - a
>joke (my past record might be for this:))
>
>I believe that each humans with Rating 1500  here would know that it clearly win
>for black!
>
>How however looks with programs?
>
>Analysis by List 504 (he was "not" my opponent):
>
>76.Sa2 Tcd6 77.Ke1 c5 78.Kf1 Sb4 79.Sc1 Le6 80.Kg1 h5 81.Tab1 Kg8 82.Ta1 Te8
>83.Ta3 Sc6 84.Sa2
>µ (-1.01) Tiefe: 17 00:01:19 27326kN
>76.Sa2 Tb8 77.Sc1 Sb4 78.Sa2 Sxa2 79.Tbxa2 Le6 80.Tc1 Kf6 81.Taa1 h5 82.Te1 Td8
>83.Tad1 Tdd6 84.Tf1 Tc5 85.Tfe1
>µ (-1.08) Tiefe: 18 00:05:24 110795kN
>
>
>Is the analysis real?
>
>What for this do different programs mean?
>
>Eduard

The Baron 0.99.6b4 on PIII 500:

 ply       time     nodes  score  pv

  6( 9)-      0     10233   -166  c1a2 a6c5 b3b4 c5a4 b4a5 a4b2
  6(11)&      0     21620   -184  c1a2 a6c5 d2e1 g7f8 e1f1 c6e6
  6(11).      0     22936   -184  c1a2 a6c5 d2e1 g7f8 e1f1 c6e6
  7(13)&      0     32370   -175  c1a2 a6c5 d2e1 g7f8 e1f1 c6e6 a1d1
  7(13).      0     36006   -175  c1a2 a6c5 d2e1 g7f8 e1f1 c6e6 a1d1
  8(14)&      0     84469   -176  c1a2 a6c5 d2e1 g7f8 e1f1 c6d6 a1d1 d8e8
  8(14).      0     92461   -176  c1a2 a6c5 d2e1 g7f8 e1f1 c6d6 a1d1 d8e8
  9(16)+      1    128805   -141  c1a2 a6c5 d2e1 g7f8
  9(16)&      3    361733   -125  c1a2 c6d6 a1d1 g7f8 d2c1 d6c6 c1b1 a6b4 a2b4
  9(16).      3    377234   -125  c1a2 c6d6 a1d1 g7f8 d2c1 d6c6 c1b1 a6b4 a2b4
 10(19)&      5    713649   -131  c1a2 c6d6 a1b1 c7c5 b1a1 g7f8 a1d1 d6c6 b2b1
a6b4
 10(19).      8   1047922   -131  c1a2 c6d6 a1b1 c7c5 b1a1 g7f8 a1d1 d6c6 b2b1
a6b4
 11(21)&     11   1450682   -131  c1a2 c6d6 b2b1 g7f8 d2e1 d8a8 b1b2 d6c6
 11(21).     13   1662003   -131  c1a2 c6d6 b2b1 g7f8 d2e1 d8a8 b1b2 d6c6
 12(22)&     20   2614508   -130  c1a2 c6d6 a1f1 c7c5 b2b1 g7f6 b1a1 a6b4 a2b4
c5b4
 12(22).     24   3038537   -130  c1a2 c6d6 a1f1 c7c5 b2b1 g7f6 b1a1 a6b4 a2b4
c5b4
 13(24)&     33   4261724   -132  c1a2 c6d6 a1f1 c7c5 b2b1 g7f6 f1g1 a6b4 b1a1
d6c6 g1f1 f6e7 f1g1
 13(24).     49   6128814   -132  c1a2 c6d6 a1f1 c7c5 b2b1 g7f6 f1g1 a6b4 b1a1
d6c6 g1f1 f6e7 f1g1
 14(25)&     90  11315318   -132  c1a2 c6d6 b2b1 g7f8 d2e1 c7c5 e1d2 a6b4 b1g1
f8e7
 14(25).    119  14726880   -132  c1a2 c6d6 b2b1 g7f8 d2e1 c7c5 e1d2 a6b4 b1g1
f8e7
 15(27)&    315  36937956   -137  c1a2 d8a8 d2e1 g7f6 e1d2 a6b4 a1g1 c6c5 g1d1
f7e6 d1g1 f6e7 a2b4
 15(27).    449  50793001   -137  c1a2 d8a8 d2e1 g7f6 e1d2 a6b4 a1g1 c6c5 g1d1
f7e6 d1g1 f6e7 a2b4
 16(27)&    669  75197036   -138  c1a2 d8a8 a1g1 g7f6 b2b1 a6b4 b1b2 c6d6 a2b4
a5b4 b2a2 d6c6 g1a1 c6c5 d2e1
 16(28).    958 109350905   -138  c1a2 d8a8 a1g1 g7f6 b2b1 a6b4 b1b2 c6d6 a2b4
a5b4 b2a2 d6c6 g1a1 c6c5 a1d1

Richard.



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.