Author: Slater Wold
Date: 12:56:28 11/24/03
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On November 24, 2003 at 15:05:53, Pete Rihaczek wrote: >I for one am very excited to see Brutus in the lead. This is an exciting advance >in chess computing and FPGA computing in general. With the ability to add >knowledge without the usual penalty, some version of this is the odds-on >favorite to be the world's strongest chess machine. Such a system was a logical >step after Deep Blue II had shown the advantages of computing in hardware. Can a >Kasparov-Brutus match be far away? Well done Dr. Donninger! 1. I just wish anyone else in the world would have made Brutus, besides Dr. D. Chrilly is a horrible person, and it makes me a little more than reluctant to purchase ANYTHING he puts out. 2. These cards, if ever made publicly available, will *probably* be around $200 (per card). Chrilly was "talking shit", saying that when he was playing Brutus vs Fritz/Junior/Shredder @ the Chessbase offices, he was having to give them X% more time, just so Brutus didn't constantly crush them. Yea, then he shows up to Graz with _8_ cards. 8x$200, you do the math on that one. 3. As the saying goes, 'may the best chess (and hardware) program win'. If that's Brutus, so be it. But I gotta be honest, I wouldn't be one bit upset if Brutus didn't win another game...
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