Author: Paulo Soares
Date: 07:36:11 08/08/99
Go up one level in this thread
On August 07, 1999 at 22:33:18, Stephen A. Boak wrote: >On August 07, 1999 at 08:49:47, Paulo Soares wrote: > >>On August 07, 1999 at 04:19:48, Tina Long wrote: >> >>>On August 06, 1999 at 12:39:15, Paulo Soares wrote: >>> >>>>Whithout doubt: Hiarcs7.32 >>>> >>>>Paulo Soares >>> >>>I agree, >>>The Fritz GUI allows: excellent "Correspondence Analysis", printable gamefile >>>with annotations, backwards with English (verbous) game analysis, good editable >>>book, great database features, etc etc. >>> >>>Hiarcs is currently the smartest engine for the CBase family, Fritz is much >>>faster & deeper. The slowsmart vs fastdeep is roughly equivalent at Tournament >>>time, but (I feel) Hiarcs does better for long time analysis. >>> >>>Chessbase 7 does all this & a whole lot more, but is extremely expensive >>>compared to F5.32 or H7.32 >>> >>>Meanwhile Rebel Century may be worth waiting for. Ed says it's got a special >>>"overnight" analysis level. >>> >>>Hi guys, >>>Tina Long >> >>Tina, Rebel is a great program for analysis too, but I feel lack of >>the "Infinite Analyses" feature (N moves). I like to analyze positions >>looking at some moves, with its variants and evaluations. When Ed >>goes to put this feature in Rebel? >> >>Paulo Soares > > To get Rebel to easily analyze and show the results for multiple moves (one by >one, not all at one time), I use the Rebel ANALYSIS EXCLUDE feature. I set the >game in INIFINITE ANALYSIS mode (continuous analysis) let it think for a while >as I watch the iterative best lines on the screen. After a while, I make the >suggested best move--by moving the piece on the board while in ANALYSIS EXCLUDE >mode--and Rebel adds that move to the EXCLUDED MOVES list; then Rebel begins >analysing the next best move, starting with Ply 1. > You can do this up to about 6 times, sequentially reviewing the successively >best moves while excluding all the previously discovered better moves. In this >manner, you can discover the top 1-N moves (viewing the iterative scores and >iteratively suggested best lines of play for each successively better move) >until the value for the N+1 best choice drops below your threshold of interest. > Using this Rebel feature, you can easily discover if there are several moves >of roughly equal value in the position. > --Steve Boak Steve, I know this form of analyze with Rebel, but I analyze positions with more rapidity using "Infinite Analyses", I would like that Rebel had that feature. But I will buy Rebel Century, that comes with many and new interesting features. Paulo Soares
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