Author: KarinsDad
Date: 19:43:19 01/25/99
Go up one level in this thread
On January 25, 1999 at 21:26:28, James Robertson wrote: >On January 25, 1999 at 19:19:22, Reynolds Takata wrote: > >>On January 25, 1999 at 18:36:40, Howard Exner wrote: >> >>>On January 25, 1999 at 15:59:07, James Robertson wrote: >>> >>>>On January 25, 1999 at 14:04:39, Reynolds Takata wrote: >>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>>A few months ago, a poster named Gram or Graham can't remember, said that Fritz >>>>>5.32 playing anonymously could score the GM norm, well it turns out he was >>>>>right. >>>>> >>>> >>>>Not necessarily. Humans play a lot of moves against other humans they would >>>>*never* play against a computer. >>> >>>I remember Shawn's thread and that was his point. That if the computer >>>had some disguise (human cheater) then humans would play it as if >>>they were playing a human. All the anti-computer play would not occur, >>>as you have just said. So the computer playing anonymously would give >>>the machine an advantage in the sense of stripping computer savy opponents >>>of their arsenal of tricks. >> >> >>I just got an email from Shaun about the post, he thanked me for posting it, but >>said that his real point was that Computers are Grandmaster "strength" against >>regular "human play", though against anti-computer play not necessarily so. He >>went on to say was that anti-computer play was a "sort" of cheating > >Cheating...? ? ???? I can think of no human GM who does not adjust his play >depending on his opponent. To say that doing the same thing against a computer >is cheating is absolutely ludicrous. > >James I think ludicrous is a little strong. I also think using the word cheating in this example is also a little strong. There are some differences between a GM adjusting his play versus a human opponent and versus a computer opponent. For one thing, most GMs do not have a strategy that works against all other GMs. In fact, they only have a strategy for a select few other GMs that they have met often (or they know they will meet at a given tournament). If a random GM shows up at the tournament, GMs do not usually have anything set up for him (unless they get time to search their databases). On the other hand, there are only a handful of computer programs out there that are GM quality. A GM would only have to study 6 or 8 of them max. Also, the anti-computer strategies that work against one program have a fair (obviously not guaranteed) chance of working against another, especially in the endgame. Therefore, if one GM had a strong program making the moves for him, another GM would have a tougher time playing against him. The same would occur if a GM had an equal strength, but different style GM making his moves. The GM who was in the dark may be confused over it. This is, of course, all speculation. However, I think that it is easier for a GM to play against today's breed of computer programs than it is to play against either another GM, or someone who had a computer program behind them. For one thing, sacrifices would have to basically be a sure thing or they would be doomed. As someone else said, "Imagine Tal sacrificing in a tournament filled with computers; an ugly sight.". KarinsDad > >>against >>computers. He gave an example of giving a weaker player(competent and strong >>still though) a detailed description of all of Deep Blues weakneses that might >>be garnered from a log of a 1000 DB vs DB games. Deep blue would have no >optionto change its nature or change as a human would. > >This is wrong. The program is not an "entity"; rather it is entirely it's >programmer's work. The programmer can change the program however he wants, as >much as he wants, whenever he wants. For pete's sake, he can even upgrade the >hardware, an option not available to the human! > >Also, I remember a huge number of outraged posts that Fritz was learning against >specific opponents and winning more games later in it's SSDF matches. > >>More to the point he said >>"imagine that the human cheater(disguised comp), not necessarily ina tournament >>sat down before 10 grandmasters for a 40/2 on ten different days(unbeknownst to >>the GM's), the comp might defeat all of the GM's or the majority. So how could >>one say that the comp isn't GM strength". > >Back to my original post; preparing for your opponent is paramount to success, >even against humans!! > >>What can be said is that in a tourney a computer is often at a disadvantage, >because his opponent knows the computer, but the computer doesn't know >anything about the opponent(a disparity). >>Both Chessbase(nixdorf classic), and Rebel(anand match) understood this, and >>attempted to make their programs play openings that their opponents had >>previously had difficulty with. The result of giving the comp knowledge of the >>specific opponent gave Fritz a HUGE success. I believe this is also one of the >>main reasons for Anands defeat in the blitz match. If not his defeat, at least >>his getting BLOWN OUT. I'm certain giving comps knowledge about how to avoid >>certain types of positions(which is already being done), will incerase comp vs >>human scores considerably(even though by my count they seem to be practically >>winning now anyway). > >This doesn't match my count..... > >James > >>All this is by the comp is an attempt to "Accentuate the >>possitives in their game" and cover up the weaknesses by playing for what they >>like. Humans do this everyday in chess. No one who hates open positions, >being >>down material and attacking is going to play the Ruy Marshall. Hey i'm tired >of >>writing :). >> >>R. Takata >>USCF Life Master >>> >>>>Imagine Tal sacrificing in a tournament filled >>>>with computers; an ugly sight. >>>> >>>>Also, we have no clue what the hardware was. >>> >>>Yes, that would be usefull info in knowing the hardware speed. >>>> >>>>James >>>> >>>>> >>>>>>The German Newsmagazine "Der Spiegel" today reports a funny story: Mr. >>>>>>Allwermann, an Elo 1925 amateur of age 55 has won a nine-round 2h/40 swiss >>>>>>tournament and achieved a performance of 2630. >>>>>> >>>>>>Organizers and competitors got somewhat suspicious when the guy announced a mate >>>>>>in eight in the decisive final round game against grandmaster Kalinichev! >>>>>> >>>>>>"Der Spiegel" writes that Mr. Allwermann's moves are reproducible with >>>>>>Fritz5.32. While nobody understands how he has done it, there are rumours that >>>>>>he formerly worked in the 'electronics business'. Moreover the German chess >>>>>>magazine "Schachmagazin 64" not only points out the fantastic attacking >>>>>>combinations but also some typical Fritz 'no-clue' moves like Bf4 in a closed >>>>>>French Winawer as White. >>>>>> >>>>>>Seems like we will need airport-type security checks in tournaments in the >>>>>>future. >>>>>> >>>>>>Jürgen
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