Author: Mark Young
Date: 12:38:29 03/21/99
Go up one level in this thread
On March 21, 1999 at 15:15:34, Paulo Soares wrote: >On March 21, 1999 at 14:03:18, Robert Hyatt wrote: > >>On March 21, 1999 at 13:15:23, Paulo Soares wrote: >> >>> In 1989 the HD approximately had a capacity of storage of 30 Mb. >>>Today they have approximately 8Gyb, or either, approximately 250x more >>>capacity of storage of data. In year 2010: >>> 8*250=2Terabytes >>>This not influence in Ed' tournamant(computerxcomputer) but >>>what the influence in computer x humans games in the openings, >>>endgames(tablebases) and midlegames? >>> >>>Best regards, >>>Paulo Soares,from Brazil. >> >> >>things haven't improved _that_ much. In 1985 we bought a machine with a >>couple of 1 gig disks. On the PC platform (IDE) I bought a Toshiba Notebook >>in 1986 with a 40 mb disk, and had SCSI been available back then (on a PC) >>they could have had 1 gig disks... >> >>Today's disks are at 50 gigs max. with 20-30 gigs being pretty common (I just >>bought a 17 gig disk for 300 bucks at Comp USA (IDE)). So in 10 years we have >>increased by maybe a factor of 50, which is more realistic... > > >Robert, > Then we will have HDs with approach capacity >of 50x20=1Terabyte. You know much about the endgames >tablebases, what you find that would happen? 7 pieces, >9 pieces, in the endgames tablebases? > >Best regards, >Paulo Soares I'm not an EGTB expert, but I see how much space it takes jumping from just 4 to 5 pieces tables. That make me think even with a Terabyte drive, 7 and for sure 9 pieces tables will still be out of reach. Bob, with todays fastest super computer. How long would to take to make a 9 pieces EGTB? Any Idea.
This page took 0.01 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.