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Subject: Re: Q5T Personality for Rebel Windows

Author: Ed Schröder

Date: 01:16:52 07/14/03

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On July 13, 2003 at 18:49:21, Eelco de Groot wrote:

>It actually worked!
>
>Congratulations to Ed and the Rebel team for finally having a working Rebel for
>Windows!

Thank you Eelco, the windows nightmare is over :)

Ed


>I had to clear enough disk space on C: for a very big swapfile, otherwise the
>Rebel engine did not want to even load in CP5.3, but it seems that after giving
>it enough space even the old Y5b/Q5T personality could be copied to the
>engines\Rebel12pre-release\personal folder and loaded. The EPD from Kurt I
>directly pasted onto the chessboard and Rebel can be put to work! Thanks Ed&Lex!
>I hope the Analysis mode can be put to work too in a later version, now max is
>about 2 minutes. However that was enough: 32.Rd6 is played by Q5T personality in
>52.3 seconds on a Celeron 500 MHz. Does not mean very much for comparison with
>regular programs maybe but still, it's just a tiny bit faster than Shredder
>7.04!
>
>
>00:00:00.1	-4,19	1	9	Rd7 Qxd7
>00:00:00.1	-4,14	1	76	Rd8+ Rxd8
>00:00:00.1	0,36	1	88	Bxc5 bxc5
>00:00:00.2	0,88	1	154	Rf1 Bxf1 Kxf1
>00:00:00.2	2,51	1	161	Qg5
>00:00:00.2	3,00	1	163	c4
>00:00:00.2	2,85	2	383	c4 Be7
>00:00:00.4	2,03	3	1801	c4 Be7 Ng5 Bxg5
>00:00:00.5	2,13	3	14338	Ng5 Qg6 Rd2 Be7 Red1 O-O
>00:00:00.8	2,13	4	28752	Ng5 Qg6 Rd2 Be7 Red1 O-O
>00:00:00.8	2,13	4	33063	Bg5
>00:00:00.8	2,13	4	28752	Ng5 Qg6 Rd2 Be7 Red1 O-O
>00:00:01.2	2,19	5	74562	Ng5 Qg6 Rd2 Be7 Red1 h6 f4 Bxg5
>00:00:01.8	2,19	6	171706	Ng5 Qg6 Rd2 Be7 Red1 h6 f4 Bxg5
>00:00:04.6	1,46	7	688939	Ng5 Qg6 Nh3 Be7 Bg5 Bb7 f3 Bxg5
>00:00:04.8	1,53	7	751703	Bg5 Be7 Bxe7 Qxe7 Qh5+ g6 Qh6 Rd8
>00:00:05.2	1,69	7	824305	Rd6 Be7 Ng5 Bxg5 Bxg5 O-O Rxb6 h6
>00:00:06.0	1,67	8	972083	Rd6 Bxd6 exd6 O-O Ne5 Qb7 c4 Rad8
>00:00:09.2	1,89	9	1647012	Rd6 Bxd6 exd6 O-O Ne5 Qb7 d7
>00:00:15.4	1,89	10	3037801	Rd6 Bxd6 exd6 O-O Ne5 Qb7 d7
>00:00:25.7	1,89	10	5526163	Ng5
>00:00:52.3	1,89	10	3037801	Rd6 Bxd6 exd6 O-O Ne5 Qb7 d7
>00:00:56.1	1,89	10	3037801	Rd6 Bxd6 exd6 O-O Ne5 Qb7 d7
>
>Maybe regular Q3 from Eric Campos is even faster than this? Can Rebel 12 find it
>quickly? If anyone wants to try the Q5T settings for tactical positions,
>slightly changed/stolen from Q3(** my comments):
>================================================================================
>[Author = Eric Campos]
>[Category = Tactics]
>
> * Q3:  (from Q2,dec05q) SS=140 (Dec05p,k,i) DeepER ATR=200 ATK=450,KS=400
> *         u=40
>
>[Pawn Value = 100]
>[Knight Value = 100]
>[Bishop Value = 100]
>[Rook Value = 100]
>[Queen Value = 95]
>[King Safety = 400]                   * (from 125)
>[Mobility = 45]                       * (from 60,120,80)** (50 in Q3?)
>[Pawn Structure = 110]
>[Passed Pawns = 125]
>[Pins = 110]
>[Bishop Pair = 110]
>[Chess Knowledge = 100]
>[Attractiveness = 250]                **  This is the main change from Q3
>[Attacking = 450]                     *  (From 350,400,150).   ( Q2 400 -> 350 )
>[Strength of Play = 100]
>[Draw Contempt Factor= 0.00]
>[Selective Search = 130]              *  (from 160,180,200)
>[Search Technique = DEEPER]
>================================================================================
>On July 13, 2003 at 05:06:35, Kurt Utzinger wrote:
>
>>Is there a program to find the nice, very strong and winning sacrifice
>>20.Rd6 !!
>>
>>Hort,V-Kurajica,B (1976)
>>[D]r3kb1r/5qpp/bp2p3/p1p1Pp2/P6Q/1P2BN2/2P2PPP/3RR1K1 w kq - 0 20
>>
>>
>>[Event "Vinkovci"]
>>[Site "?"]
>>[Date "1976.??.??"]
>>[Round "?"]
>>[White "Hort, Vlastimil"]
>>[Black "Kurajica, Bojan"]
>>[Result "1-0"]
>>[ECO "B30"]
>>[PlyCount "57"]
>>[EventDate "1976.??.??"]
>>
>>1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 e6 4. O-O a6 5. Bxc6 dxc6 6. d3 Qc7 7. e5 f5 8. a4
>>a5 9. Na3 Ne7 10. Nc4 Nd5 11. Re1 Nb6 12. Nxb6 Qxb6 13. b3 Qc7 14. d4 $1 cxd4
>>15. Qxd4 b6 16. Qc4 Qd7 17. Be3 Ba6 18. Qh4 c5 19. Rad1 Qf7 20. Rd6 {
>>Dieses positionelle Qualitaetsopfer gewinnt die Partie.} 20... Bxd6 21. exd6
>>O-O 22. Ne5 Qb7 23. Bg5 Qd5 24. Be7 Bb7 25. f3 Qd2 26. d7 Rfb8 27. c4 Qc3 28.
>>Kf1 Qd2 29. Qg5 $1 (29. Qg5 Qxg5 (29... Qc3 30. Bf6 g6 31. Qh6) 30. Bxg5 Kf8
>>31. Rd1 Rd8 32. Rd6) 1-0
>>
>>Qh6) 30. Bxg5 Kf8
>>31. Rd1 Rd8 32. Rd6) 1-0



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