Author: blass uri
Date: 09:45:16 04/25/99
Go up one level in this thread
On April 24, 1999 at 13:55:16, Dave Gomboc wrote: >On April 24, 1999 at 08:52:58, blass uri wrote: > >> >>On April 24, 1999 at 08:03:16, Dave Gomboc wrote: >> >> >>>There is a good chance that there will be a chess tournament with two or three >>>hundred people in my part of the world in a year or so. I inquired about >>>software playing in the tournament, subject to some normal restrictions (only >>>the author can enter a program, programs can't win a prize, players can opt to >>>not play the machine). The response -- not from the actual organizer, but some >>>of the people involved in the fundraising -- was the opinion that the only >>>people who would play computers are the people who forgot to check off the box >>>"don't want to play computers" on the entry form >> >>I do not agree about it. >>There are people who want to play against computers. >> >>I did not play against a computer in a tournament game but >>I played some years ago in a tournament when there was a computer and I could >>tell before the tournament that I refuse to play against it and I did not do it >>not because of memory problems. >> >>, and that if GMs wanted to play >>>computers they could do it at home. >> >>They cannot win money prizes by winning the computers at home. >> >>I do not understand these people. >>I could understand if they said that they do not like computers but they did not >>give you a rational answer. >> >>Uri > >Well, it was clear that they wouldn't choose to play a computer in a tournament. > They said they didn't know anyone who would, and felt that the GMs would feel >the same way about the issue that they do. That this would be true isn't >entirely clear to me, but it's certainly plausible, however much I might not >like it. > >I have seen reports of Junior playing in over-the-board tournaments in Israel. >What are the adjustments made to the tournament that allow the computer to play? >(e.g. it can't win prize money) > >Dave I asked Amir ban about it and this is his reply: "In non-FIDE tournaments this is up to the tournament organizers. In the tounaments we played we were always eligible for the prizes. In one case, in the Kfar-Saba Weekend 98 they wanted to limit us to 3rd prize, which is one reason why we didn't participate. I don't remember if there was an option to refuse to play. In some case it was not allowed, and in some cases it was allowed, but I don't remember anyone refusing to play, except Smirin (illegally and for tactical reasons) refusing in the Jubilee Rapid. Note however that Junior only plays in open tournaments, and not in closed round-robins, not (since 96) in national championships, and not (since 98) in the league. It is not true, in my experience, that most masters do not want to play computers, or will do so only for a lot of money. It is usually the opposite, but not always of course." Uri
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