Author: Gerhard Sonnabend
Date: 10:00:52 10/22/03
Go up one level in this thread
On October 22, 2003 at 08:29:51, Joachim Rang wrote: >On October 22, 2003 at 06:10:25, Gerhard Sonnabend wrote: > >>Hi ! >> >>The third match has continued. >>(I only post the short tables here) >> >>Could any chessprogram profit from longer/shorter levels ? >> >>At the moment i carry out an experiment to find out if there are chessengines >>which profit from shorter or longer (time)levels more than other engines. >>The 2 finished matches were played on a P4-1600 / 64MB HTs / 4-TBs / ponder=off >>with the "Noomen" (A-H) (=160 games every match) under the ChessBase-Fritz7-GUI. >> >>The current matches is (results after 140 games on each level): >>Chess Tiger 15.0(CB) "Normal" vs Beta-WIN-Rebel 12 (style=Test12a) >> Total (+ 1/2 -) in % >> 5min/game 96.0-44.0 (78-36-26) 68.57 >> 10min/game 92.0-48.0 (72-40-28) 65.71 >> 30min/game 79.5-60.5 (53-53-34) 56.78 >>120min/game 76.5-63.5 (45-63-32) 54.64 >>(Played on a Cel. 1.8GHz / 128MB HTs / ...the rest look above) >> >>All the details, the tables and the games can be found on: >>www.pcschach.de >> >>Best G.S. > > >thanks. This is a very interesting experiment. I hope this third match will be >finished soon. > >One suggestion, if you have time and are in the mood: > >Test Fritz 5.32 against Aristarch 4.21. According to some Ratinglists Aristarch >profits form longer time-controls whereas Fritz 5.32 looses. Additionally these >two engines are about equal strength. so it might be possible to see Fritz >winning the blitz-matches, while aristarch winning the tournament-match. If this >happens the "diminishing score"-argunent could be refuted. so try it out, >please. > >I know Fritz 5.32 is not a current engine, but _if_ Christophe Theron is true it >should benefit from quicker hardware and longer times as much as other >(well-balanced) engines. > Hi ! Sorry - the next match will be: Rebel 12 Final (style=Test 13b) vs Hiarcs 9 Best G.S.
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.