Author: Bernhard Bauer
Date: 03:54:26 01/16/06
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On January 16, 2006 at 06:52:43, Bernhard Bauer wrote: >On January 16, 2006 at 01:51:38, Bigler wrote: > >>Hi folks, >> >>Karjakin,Sergey (2660) - Anand,V (2792) [B90] >>Corus A Wijk aan Zee NED (1), 14.01.2006 >>1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.Be3 e5 7.Nb3 Be6 8.f3 Be7 9.Qd2 >>0-0 10.0-0-0 Nbd7 11.g4 b5 12.g5 b4 13.Ne2 Ne8 14.f4 a5 15.f5 a4 16.Nbd4 exd4 >>17.Nxd4 b3 18.Kb1 bxc2+ 19.Nxc2 Bb3 20.axb3 axb3 21.Na3 Ne5 22.h4 Ra5 23.Qc3N. >>Karjakin deviates from Leko-Vallejo in Monte Carlo 2005, where 23.Qe2 was played >>and the game ended in a draw after 67 moves. But Anand is prepared: 23...Qa8 >>24.Bg2. >> >>24...Nc7! >> >>On my computer (AMD 64 X2 4600+) >>Programs find the move in : >>- Fritz 9 doesnt find the move after more than 2 hours >>- Rybka 101 Beta 10d finds the move 24...Nc7 after 26min 25s >>- Fruit 2.2.1 finds the move after 17min 22s >>- Deep Shredder 9 using the dual core finds the move after 5min 45s >> >>Was just interesting for me to see how difficult is the move to find for the top >>programs on high speed computer. >> >>Best regards to all > >On my slow AMD XP 1800 MHZ Toga2 takes 9:53 min to find Ne8c7, at 15/52 depth. >Kind regards >Bernhard Sorry, it was 13:44 at 15/56 depth. Kind regards Bernhard
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