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Subject: Re: Is There A Way To Access Or Obtain Information On All Deep Blue Games?

Author: Vincent Diepeveen

Date: 05:19:44 05/13/04

Go up one level in this thread


On May 13, 2004 at 08:16:57, Vincent Diepeveen wrote:

>On May 12, 2004 at 00:55:25, Will Hunter wrote:
>
>>I don't mean the games from the match of 89, 96, 97, against Kasparov, but all
>>test games and games by other Grandmasters. The games I'm most interested in are
>>1997 test games.
>>
>>Will
>
>Not a single testgame is ever published.
>
>However if you go to the internet and look to games played by an account called
>deepviolet at chessclub.com then you probably are looking to a program in the
>same strength category.
>
>It doesn't know anything about things like doubled pawn g2,g3 either and is
>tactical reasonable strong. Very comparable in strength with deep blue.

what i mean to say is, it was by far the highest rated account at ICC that made
g2,g3 doubled pawn mistakes. I do not know a single other program making such
huge mistakes with it like deepviolet. there is another 10 positional things.

but please take me correct, gnuchess does know the g2,g3 so if someone strips
gnuchess a bit and puts bishops a bit higher you get similar mistakes too.

even then it's level was impressive at icc.

>Was high rated in 1997, hardly became better sincethen. 100% same style & errors
>like deep blue.
>
>Hossa (2498) vs. DeepViolet (2864) --- 1999.05.31 07:25:21
>Rated blitz match, initial time: 2 minutes, increment: 18 seconds
>
>  1.  e4       (0:00)    e5       (0:07)
>  2.  Nf3      (0:00)    Nc6      (0:07)
>  3.  Bb5      (0:00)    a6       (0:06)
>  4.  Ba4      (0:00)    Nf6      (0:05)
>  5.  O-O      (0:00)    d6       (0:06)
>  6.  Bxc6+    (0:00)    bxc6     (0:16)
>  7.  d4       (0:00)    Nxe4     (0:42)
>  8.  Qe2      (1:11)    f5       (0:08)
>  9.  dxe5     (0:27)    c5       (0:08)
> 10.  exd6     (0:23)    cxd6     (0:26)
> 11.  Ng5      (0:00)    Be7      (0:21)
> 12.  Nxe4     (0:28)    fxe4     (0:07)
> 13.  Qxe4     (0:16)    d5       (0:08)
> 14.  Qf3      (0:15)    Rf8      (0:12)
> 15.  Qh5+     (0:44)    g6       (0:06)
> 16.  Qxh7     (0:16)    Bf5      (0:12)
> 17.  Bh6      (0:23)    g5       (0:40)
> 18.  Qg7      (0:00)    Qd6      (0:40)
> 19.  Re1      (0:44)    Be4      (0:12)
> 20.  Bxg5     (0:09)    Bxg5     (0:35)
> 21.  Qxg5     (0:23)    Kd7      (0:07)
> 22.  Nc3      (0:23)    Bxg2     (0:14)
> 23.  Qg4+     (0:23)    Kc7      (0:09)
> 24.  Qxg2     (0:13)    Rg8      (0:11)
> 25.  Re7+     (0:11)    Qxe7     (0:07)
> 26.  Nxd5+    (0:14)    Kd6      (0:06)
> 27.  Nxe7     (0:16)    Rxg2+    (0:55)
> 28.  Kxg2     (0:01)    Kxe7     (0:18)
> 29.  c4       (0:04)
>       {Black resigns} 1-0
>
>Around 1997 and 1998, all software made major mistakes, also tactical ones.
>DeepViolet i could never catch at making 9 ply mistakes and tactical also not 10
>ply mistakes. But of course positional mistakes...



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