"Sanny" wrote in message
...
first move out of the Benko book, and black goes wrong.
i assume 'nomal' level is here measured in seconds - or about 2 minutes a
move.
6. a2-a3{36} a7-a5{104}
7. a3-b4{72} c5-b4{100}
8. e2-e4{18} e7-e5{120}
9. Bf1-d3{26} d7-d6{92}
10. Nd2-b3{20} h7-h5{150}
then another 5 consecutive pawn moves, making 9 out of 10
Yes, I found that there was something wrong with positional analysis
and it was playing pawns.unnecesarily. Now the Problem has been
corrected.
Of course it has.
Can you tell me something about what are the good squares for White
Bishop and White Knights?
Yes. It depends on 2 things; the position of your pawns, and also the
position of the other player's pawns.
For instance - for black, remove the Benko from your opening book, [take out
the b5 move], and stick to a Modern Benoni, see also Czech Benoni, and Old
Benoni.
The Benko is a gambit which offers to give up a pawn for strategic pressure
against the White Q side - because your program can't see any further than
the NY Times Blog page, then you too should avoid strategic ventures for a
moment's actions.
And how much penalty should be given to a
King when it is moved without Chastling.
It should be put into a cage with Messers Lafferty and Sloan for 20
minutes - then the boy'll learn to chastle early! and chastle right!
You might also think of penalising it for every move it stays in the centre
after move 10 - look what happened to them!
But most of all you should leave here for 6 months and talk to the people in
chess.computer and learn about their evaluation rubrics [also for free].
If you leave you King in the centre, the whole game becomes about you and
your king [like "ego", no?] And its not paranoia - All the other player's
pieces are //really// out to get you while you are stuck in the center. The
only problem with this practice is that while it suits meglomaniacs, it
almost always loses ;(
A sad story, but true.
Cordially, Phil Innes
Bye
Sanny
Play Chess at: http://www.GetClub.com/Chess.html