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.