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Subject: Re: Fritz, next year.

Author: Paul Richards

Date: 16:07:57 07/02/99

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On July 02, 1999 at 17:22:08, KarinsDad wrote:

>A computer program with the same name on one set of hardware is allowed to
>participate in tournaments due to a different computer program with the same
>name on different hardware qualifying in an earlier tournament. A person with
>the same name could not do this.
>
>And, of course, this is why it is so hard to give a rating to a program. You
>have to run the same software in the same hardware configuration in order to
>establish a rating for it (and this rating does not apply to other versions or
>other hardware).

This is all true of course, but the reason people play against computers at all
is out of the same general curiosity that keeps this group going.  Everybody
knows that the day will come when computers are unbeatable at chess.  Even if
Kasparov couldn't study DB's games (though we can only speculate how much of a
difference that would make) if they wanted to, IBM could put together a newer
version so powerful it could play people on the Internet at the same time it was
beating Kasparov.  Now THERE'S a marketing idea for IBM. :))  With existing
technology it's just a matter of money to build the required machine.  The
remaining question is when a computer will be able to beat everybody and fit on
a desktop.  Then after that it will be, when can a single-CPU PC typically used
for business do the same thing.  That will keep us entertained for another good
ten years perhaps, but it's all in fun anyway since the long term answer is
pretty much a given.  In the early days of computers it may have looked like
they would never stand a chance, but now everybody has a better picture of how
fast the technology is moving.  Then after the desktop machine is too tough it
will be the handheld, and then the toaster, and so on. ;)



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