Author: Micheal Cummings
Date: 05:44:40 11/21/98
Go up one level in this thread
On November 21, 1998 at 08:23:06, blass uri wrote: > >On November 21, 1998 at 07:46:16, Micheal Cummings wrote: > >> >>On November 20, 1998 at 17:39:03, James T. Walker wrote: >> >>>Hello, >>>For anyone interested: >>> >>>This is game #10 of my 12 game match. Chessmaster was kicked out of book on the >>>2nd move. I think Rebel was out of book on either move 3 or 4. Very strange >>>opening. Chessmaster called the mate in 6. The score is now 5-5 with two more >>>games to go. >>> >>>Chessmaster now running on AMD K6-2 @350 MHZ 64 Meg hash. >>>Rebel 10.0 now running on PII @333 mhz 100 Meg hash. >>> >>>[Event "40/90"] >>>[Site "FL"] >>>[Date "1998.11.20"] >>>[Round "10"] >>>[White "REBEL 10.0"] >>>[Black "CM5500"] >>>[Result "0-1"] >>>[WhiteElo "2552"] >>>[BlackElo "2550"] >>>[ECO "D00"] >>> >>>1. d4 d5 2. Bg5 Nc6 3. Nf3 f6 4. Bf4 g5 5. Bg3 g4 6. Ng1 e5 7. dxe5 fxe5 >>>8. e4 Nf6 9. Bh4 Qd6 10. Bxf6 Qxf6 11. exd5 Bc5 12. Qd2 Nb4 13. Nc3 Bf5 >>>14. Rc1 O-O 15. Na4 Qd6 16. Nxc5 Qxc5 17. c4 Nxa2 18. Rd1 Nb4 19. Rc1 Rae8 >>>20. Rc3 e4 21. h3 e3 22. fxe3 Rxe3+ 23. Rxe3 Nc2+ 24. Ke2 Qxc4+ 25. Rd3 >>>Bxd3+ 26. Qxd3 Qf4 27. Kd1 Ne3+ 28. Kc1 Nxg2+ 29. Kd1 Ne3+ 30. Kc1 Qxf1+ >>>31. Qxf1 Rxf1+ 32. Kd2 Nf5 33. hxg4 Ng3 34. Rh3 Rxg1 35. Ke3 Rg2 36. Kf4 >>>Nf1 37. Rb3 Rf2+ 38. Ke5 b6 39. Rc3 Rf7 40. d6 cxd6+ 41. Kxd6 Kg7 42. Ke5 >>>Nh2 43. Rc4 Kh6 44. Ke6 Rg7 45. Kf5 Rg5+ 46. Ke6 Nxg4 47. Ra4 Rg7 48. Kf5 >>>Kh5 49. Ra1 Rf7+ 50. Ke6 Kg6 51. Ra3 h5 52. Rg3 Rf6+ 53. Kd5 Kg5 54. Ra3 >>>a5 55. Rh3 h4 56. Rh1 Rh6 57. b4 h3 58. bxa5 bxa5 59. Kc4 Kh4 60. Ra1 Rh5 >>>61. Kb3 Nf2 62. Ra4+ Kg3 63. Ra3 h2 64. Kc4+ Kg2 65. Ra1 a4 66. Kb4 Rh4+ >>>67. Ka3 h1=Q 68. Rxh1 Kxh1 69. Kb2 Rc4 70. Ka2 Nd3 71. Ka3 Kg2 72. Ka2 >>>Rc1 73. Ka3 Ra1# 0-1 >>> >>>Jim Walker >> >>I think alot of people underestimate CM5500 and also now CM6000, If these games >>played against Rebel show how good the CM5500 chess engine is, I can only >>imagine how strong the new CM6000 program must be. >> >>People can come on here and say, yes CM6000 is strong but it could not compete >>with the likes of Rebel 10 or Fritz, well until there is some thorough testing >>to show just how strong or weak CM6000 is, I am going to come out and say that >>it is in the top three of chess program on the market today. >> >>I know there are quite a few people sitting there thinking, rubbish, No way. But >>I CM6000 has, well pretty much flogged all freeware programs at 40/2 time that I >>have played manually. And I have loaned a friend my copy of CM6000 and he is in >>the process of playing Fritz, at 40/2 hrs and then going to play a 5 minute >>series of matches, So far in the 40/2 hrs, CM6000 is leading 3.5-2.5 over Fritz. > >what is the hardware in this match? >> >>I am trying to get my hands on the games to post, but so far my money is on >>CM6000, to give a whipping to Number 1 Fritz. > >I think that the number 1 of fritz5 is not justified even in the ssdf games. >Junior5 should be number 1 in the ssdf games because we should delete 4 games of >Rebel8(p90) against Junior(p200) when Junior lost 2.5:1.5 because Junior was >slowed down by a big factor. > >Pentium200MMX is also optimized for fritz5 and not for Junior5 and Junior can >earn more speed from the newest pentiums than fritz5. > >Uri Fritz is being played on a P233MMX and CM6000 on a P200MMX Both have 64 Meg of Ram.
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