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Subject: Re: FPGAs playing chess--an expert opinion

Author: Dann Corbit

Date: 12:10:51 12/22/99

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On December 22, 1999 at 14:05:42, Robert Hyatt wrote:
[snip[
>100 times as many is not easy.  It is not easy to understand, but the SP and
>the chess processors fit together very nicely.  If you make the SP 10x faster
>without changing the chess processors, you go _no_ deeper.  Because the SP will
>overrun the chess processors and they have to back off one ply to keep up.  Net
>gain:  0.  If you make the SP 10x faster, you can add 10x more chess processors
>and _really_ pick up the pace 10x.  The SP will be going 1 ply deeper, the
>chess processors can stay at the current 4 ply search, because there are 10x
>as many of them to take the 10x increased data from the SP.

From:
http://www.rs6000.ibm.com/hardware/largescale/SP/index.html

You can now get SP's with Spec_Int base rate of 908 and Spec_fp base rate of
1760.  I suspect that they can push special machines to a higher plateau.  I
don't know the throughput of the machine that was used, but I suspect that new
machines can do much better.

By the SP going 10x faster do you mean total machine throughput, or does the
clock rate have to increase by that much?



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