Author: Kurt Utzinger
Date: 23:08:54 08/07/04
Go up one level in this thread
On August 08, 2004 at 01:29:39, Albert Silver wrote:
>On August 07, 2004 at 22:34:11, James T. Walker wrote:
>
>>On August 07, 2004 at 21:55:00, Thomas Logan wrote:
>>
>>>THOMAS-KBZT8WLT, Blitz:5' 0
>>>
>>> 12345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890
>>>1 Shredder 8 00000½½1010011½½½01½½111½1½10½1½½1½10½½1111½0001½1 27.5/50
>>>2 Pro Deo 1.0 11111½½0101100½½½10½½000½0½01½0½½0½01½½0000½1110½0 22.5/50
>>>
>>>Pro Deo using own book Mach 10 personality chessbase gui
>>>Amd 64 3400@2.4g
>>>
>>>Tom
>>
>>Hello Tom,
>>I played 90 games of G/5min with Prodeo_Mach10 personality vs Ruffian 2.0.2 and
>>it ended with Ruffian winning by +42 -23 =25 (+74 Elo). All my games were
>>played on 2 XP2400+/auto232 machines with both programs using the ChessPartner
>>GUI.
>>Jim
>
>Personally, I'd like to see this done with the 2 Nunn sets, totalling 35
>different basic openings, or 70 games total, with each engine playing both
>sides. The reason is simply that the Pro Deo book is very light, and as I use
>engines more for analysis, this means (for me) that the pure engine strength is
>of particualr interest as opposed to the whole picture. I'm perfectly aware that
>the book is a part of the whole, but not if you're planning to only analyze
>positions or a game's moves. Anyhow, I'm running the Pro Deo Mach 10 in the
>Nunn2 set against Junior 8 (7-5 after 12 games in J8's favor) and once all the
>games are done (38 to go), will compare with the default settings.
>
> Albert
Hi Albert
You (as me) are somewhat an exception in the computer
chess scene: we want to have the strongest (naked) engine
and we do not bother about books and other stuff. By the
way I very much like Pro Deo as most other Rebel engines
because of their playing style which is more suitable vs
humans than vs computers I think.
Kurt [http://www.utzingerk.com]
This page took 0 seconds to execute
Last modified: Thu, 15 Apr 21 08:11:13 -0700
Current Computer Chess Club Forums at Talkchess. This site by Sean Mintz.