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Subject: Re: About CC-events in the US

Author: Matthew Hull

Date: 12:41:05 11/20/03

Go up one level in this thread


On November 20, 2003 at 15:27:33, Uri Blass wrote:

>On November 20, 2003 at 14:55:37, Matthew Hull wrote:
>
>>On November 20, 2003 at 14:23:10, Amir Ban wrote:
>>
>>>On November 20, 2003 at 08:59:25, Matthew Hull wrote:
>>>
>>>>On November 20, 2003 at 06:57:30, Amir Ban wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>On November 19, 2003 at 18:12:12, Matthew Hull wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>>On November 19, 2003 at 17:30:36, Amir Ban wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>On November 19, 2003 at 12:02:56, Matthew Hull wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>On November 19, 2003 at 11:51:59, martin fierz wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>On November 19, 2003 at 11:34:17, Matthew Hull wrote:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>On November 19, 2003 at 11:30:37, martin fierz wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>On November 19, 2003 at 11:06:21, Matthew Hull wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>On November 19, 2003 at 10:55:26, martin fierz wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>On November 19, 2003 at 10:31:54, Robert Hyatt wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>here.  Makes a _lot_ of sense.  And it shows just how "world" aware the
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>ICCA actually is.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>i don't really want to be involved in this thread, but i can't resist this
>>>>>>>>>>>>>one...
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>disclaimer: of course it would be much more sensible to have the championship in
>>>>>>>>>>>>>the US from time to time.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>cheapo: so the ICCA does something which is not good for *one* country
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>That's one cheapo that doesn't work.  It would be like 2000 years ago holding
>>>>>>>>>>>>gladiator events that discommode only one country, Rome.
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>MH
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>of course it works, and you just invite the next follow up cheapo ;-)
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>2000 years ago the romans were perhaps not aware that there was much more to the
>>>>>>>>>>>world than rome. sometimes one gets the feeling that the US citizens are no
>>>>>>>>>>>different in this respect...
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>Ok, how about holding a world chess championship that only inconviences
>>>>>>>>>>Russians.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>I think you get the idea.  :)
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>MH
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>of course i get the idea! i put a disclaimer on my first post stating clearly
>>>>>>>>>that IMO the championship should be held in the US from time to time, and i
>>>>>>>>>labelled my posts as cheapos :-)
>>>>>>>>>i thought that made it clear enough...
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>going back to your comparison with the russians: exactly how many american
>>>>>>>>>programs are in the top 10 of the SSDF list?
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>The SSDF list only uses consumer-grade technology to test programs.  Programs
>>>>>>>>tuned to that limited technology will always top that list.  That is why the
>>>>>>>>list is of limited importance.  A real WCCC is going to attract high performance
>>>>>>>>projects, not just consumer oriented projects.  This is what the New World has
>>>>>>>>always offered.  But, Old Worlders have a problem with that I guess.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>Do any such New World high performance projects exist ?
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>Crafty can be such a project on practically a moment's notice (I believe).
>>>>>>Other programs are similiarly suited.  If the WCCC comes to North America, the
>>>>>>projects will materialize.  This was the benefit of limiting the event to every
>>>>>>three years and making it a practical event, length-wise.  It provided time for
>>>>>>the husbanding of resources, planning, development and sponsorship along with a
>>>>>>relative rarity that made the event that much more important and compelling (and
>>>>>>thus an easier sell to the people with the expensive resources).
>>>>>>
>>>>>>The current cycle with it's awkward timing and extended length, along with it's
>>>>>>persistent location in Europe (not to mention its archaic modus operendi) seems
>>>>>>calculated to favor European commercial interests while excluding projects from
>>>>>>North America.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>Perhaps it is the punishment Europeans are determined to mete out to us for the
>>>>>>DB2 triumph, which seems to be universally reviled overseas.  EU types are maybe
>>>>>>fed up with the dominance of North American, high-end computer chess projects.
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>There's nothing to be fed up with, since the dominance is long gone.
>>>>
>>>>Yes, the ICGA have seen to that by keeping the WCCC out of North America and
>>>>making inconvenient for North Americans to participate.  Nicely done, IMO.
>>>>
>>>>>Hong Kong
>>>>>1995 was the swansong. There were 4 of them there, but losing to Fritz, and even
>>>>>before that, in 1992, to Schroeder, underscored that they have lost their
>>>>>advantage and so their reason in life.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>That is a not entirely unreasonable opinion, though still incorrect, IMO.  Bob
>>>>addressed the competitive issue in another thread here.  There are American
>>>>programs suited to high performance hardware which would have a definite
>>>>advantage, even over your project.  Yes?
>>>>
>>>
>>>Sure. There are tens if not hundreds of Americans who would make me look silly
>>>with multi-million $ projects and $10 million hardware. The only thing holding
>>>them back is that they can't afford to go to Europe.
>>
>>As has been stated already, it's not just travel, but duration and timing
>>(Thanksgiving?  Huge US holiday.) as well, which are departures from the classic
>>events.
>>
>>
>>>
>>>It has been tested once in a Rebel vs. Crafty match where Crafty was given a 100
>>>to 1 time advantage. The match was aborted after Rebel won the first game.
>>
>>
>>Look a crafty on ICC, with barely a 2x hardware advantage it goes toe-to-toe
>>with Rebel, Shredder, Tiger, etc.  None of those programs dominate crafty.  So
>>your "friendly" _little_ jibe is demonstrated to be bogus.  ;)
>
>
>ICC is mainly blitz.
>
>Longer time control help the stronger programs.


The CCT history suggest commercial advantages are not that large.  GCP already
told Bob he did not want to play a match with Crafty on Opteron 4-way.  If
Crafty or Ferret shows up somewhere on a 32-way or higher, are you going to put
your money on a commercial entry?

I didn't think so.


>
>You can find that Crafty against GNuchess with significantly better hardware
>lose at blitz but does better at long time control.
>
>I guess that same is going to happen to the opposite direction if you try Crafty
>against the top commercial programs.


Should be easy enough to test on ICC with willing participants.  And maybe Rebel
and Crafty meet in CCT6.

MH


>
>
>>
>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>But that's not good for business, ist it?  It looks to me that the status quo
>>>>favors your interests.
>>>>
>>>
>>>So it's the money motive working here ? This would be an object lesson on how to
>>>bring industry giants and ivy-league colleges to their knees: make them travel,
>>>or make them get a $50,000 sponsor.
>>
>>
>>I'm suggesting that you defend the current arrangements because they favor your
>>project.  American supercomputers reduce your odds of finishing first to just
>>about zero.
>
>No
>
>Deep blue prototype already failed to win against Fritz3 in 1995 inspite of big
>hardware advantage.
>
>big hardware advantage for super computer does not mean that the chance to win
>for other is about zero.
>
>Uri



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