Author: Graham Laight
Date: 09:51:45 01/10/00
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I'd like to offer a theory about this. Assume that all programs are optimised for G/60 (for the sake of simplicity). When Genius 1 came out, the PC computers were probably 20 Mhz. So, playing it on a 200 Mhz PC would result in Genius using the amount of processor power it had been optimised for. The Freewares though only had a tenth of the processor power they were optimised for. I have no evidence to support this theory, but it seems credible to me. Also, the faster the game, the less important is the extra knowledge that modern programs can bring to the table. Could it be that "greater knowledge is less important than tactical accuracy in blitz chess" applies to computers as well as humans? -g On January 09, 2000 at 01:37:44, Bobby Palacios wrote: >Hello, > >I was wondering how the old Genius 1 would do in blitz against my newer programs >so i tested it against some of the stronger freeware programs running under >Fritz, and came up with the following results. All programs ran on a Pentium >200 MMX, with 32 meg ram. > >Game in 5 results. > >Chess Genius 1 - Anmon 5.03 5-3 >Chess Genius 1 - CometB11 7-1 >Chess Genius 1 - Crafty 17.04 4.5-3.5 >Chess Genius 1 - LG2000 v.2.0 4.5-3.5 >Chess Genius 1 - TCB 0042 5.5-2.5 > >So for 40 games Genius scored 26.5/40. Very interesting results indeed. It's >amazing how this old program did so well against the top freeware programs. Any >comments welcome. > >thanks, >BShot
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