Author: Drexel,Michael
Date: 16:16:54 11/15/03
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On November 15, 2003 at 17:38:48, George Tsavdaris wrote: >On November 15, 2003 at 17:29:57, George Tsavdaris wrote: > >>On November 15, 2003 at 16:18:51, Dimitris Poulos wrote: >> >>>Kasparov will score 33%. >>>Since they can't bit Shredder, they demonstrate that their software is >>>human-oriented. This is business and has nothing to do with chess. >>>I would like to see Radjabov in five years against these toys. >>> >> >>I see clearly, that these toys now, would beat Radjabov convincingly. >>In five years they would beat him easily. >> Chess programs don't play "human chess" so all humans say they are stupid, >>don't know chess etc..., but the truth is we are thinking in a human way >>so we can't believe that computers have dominated chess with this strange and >>wrong(not human) game. They can beat the 99,9999986163% of the human population that plays chess of course so the ratio is 99,9986163%, >>and only 100-200 people can resist and lose and only 7-8 people can really >>resist. So who is better in chess? > >It may seem ridiculous to define that computers are better if they beat the >50% at least, of the human population and not if they beat the top 100-200 >humans and perhaps it is. But i think they beat the top 100-200, ecxept 7-8 >top players or some top anti-comp players. The whole discussion about who is better is ridiculous anyway. As a matter of fact all Chess programs are still stupid today. Chess programs can do almost perfectly what I can't do: Calculating concrete lines. They can't evaluate a position well without search at all. It is nonsetical to write Chess programs in order to beat humans. Who is interested in that? Only some weaker human players who like to see the stronger player losing? Computers help me and a lot other amateur chessplayers to understand quickly what is going on exactly in SuperGM games. Computers don't dominate chess at all. Michael
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