Author: stuart taylor
Date: 17:36:34 02/12/00
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On February 11, 2000 at 00:02:35, William James Sidis wrote: >On February 10, 2000 at 15:37:27, stuart taylor wrote: > >>On February 10, 2000 at 01:11:41, William James Sidis wrote: >> >>>1. d4 Nc5 2. e4 d5 3. e5 Bf5 4. c3 Qd7 5. Nf3 out of book 0-0-0 6. Bb5 a6 7. Ba4 >>>h6 8. b4 Qe6 9. Nbd2 f6 10. Nb3 fxe5 11. Nc5 Qd6 12. Bxc6 Qxc6 13. Nxe5 Qf6 14. >>>Qa4 Rd6 +- 15. b5 g6 16. bxa6 bxa6 17. g4 Bd3?? [ 17...Bxg4 18. Rb1!] 18. Ncxd3 >>>e6 19. Rb1 Qd8 20. Nc5 Ne7 21. Nxa6 Rb6 22. Nc5! Kb8 23. Qa6 c6 24. Ned7+ Qxd7 >>>25. Qxb6+ Qb7 26. Qxb7# 1-0 10'per side ...analysis at 10s. I have another mate >>>in 27 moves. New e-mail wjsidis@earthlink.net >> >> >>This posting is difficult to appreaciate, as you missed out essential >>information. As follows- >> 1.Who is white and who is black? >> 2.Exactly which Fritz? 5.16? 5.32? >> 3.which hardware? and mhz? etc. >> 4.What are the timings of both players? >> 5.Other settings? >>Only with that information, can one expect a game to be of any interest imho. >> S.Taylor. >This game was Fritz 5.00 playing against itself on a PIII-500 Mhz/ 128MB >RAM...10' per side per game. 22. Nc5! is a mate-in-5. This is the shortest game >in my 2507 game database of TFritz5.00-TFritz5.00 games. Most are 10' per side >per game. Thanks! Very interesting! Normally fritz sees what it's about to do to itself at that time control. Stuart Taylor
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