Author: Drexel,Michael
Date: 11:47:02 01/03/05
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On January 02, 2005 at 17:18:57, F. Huber wrote: >On January 02, 2005 at 16:02:20, Drexel,Michael wrote: > >>Chessmaster is no longer the undisputed mate solver amongst the chess playing >>engines. > >Hello Michael, > >these examples really show the impressive mate solving capabilities of Fruit! :) > >But of course they also are absolutely no problem for ChestUCI - look at the >following results, which have been found by its automatic search mode (except >the #5 in brute force), and be aware that this is all on my slow Celeron/400: > >rb2b2R/2npk3/p1p3PP/1n2K1N1/1p4PN/2p3p1/3p3p/3B2rq w - - bm #31; 00:00 @ >C3/K3/P2/X2; >R1n2N2/4pk1B/2Q1r2B/2K2b2/Rr1n2P1/1q1P1PP1/4N2b/8 w - - bm #16; 00:00 @ >C1/K3/P3/X3; >5n2/B3K3/2p3p1/4k1N1/7P/3bN1P1/2Prn1P1/1q6 w - - bm #22; 00:00 @ C3/K2/P1/X1; >1n6/8/8/R3Np1K/1N3k2/1R6/1P5P/3n4 w - - bm #5; 00:04; >3nn3/2p2p2/6p1/n1PB3n/3BK3/1P2NRP1/3pNPnk/3n3b w - - bm #20; 00:00 @ >C3/K2/P1/X1; > >BTW, where do you have those nice mate positions from? They were already posted here. I found them with the search engine. >Do you have more? (If yes - nur her damit! ;-)) No, but this mate in 21 is AFAIK still not solved by a computer program :-) [D]8/8/8/8/8/3Q4/pp1KPPP1/k6n w - - 0 1 Michael > >Best regards, >Franz.
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