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| Tags: cat, hat, open, world |
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#1
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On 25 Oct 2006 15:27:01 -0700, "Zero" wrote:
But what I don't understand is how he did it? You can't just put a computer in a hat and also how There was a Mission Impossible episode in which this was done. Rolin had a earpiece that looked like a hearing aid, but it was really a radio receiver. Barney put the moves into a computer and radioed the best move to Rolin. Rolin won, but people got suspicious after Rolin took the hearing aid out, but could still hear. But this was part of the plan. --- Replace you know what by j to email |
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#2
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On Oct 25, 9:52 pm, Jud McCranie wrote: On 25 Oct 2006 15:27:01 -0700, "Zero" wrote: But what I don't understand is how he did it? You can't just put a computer in a hat and also how There was a Mission Impossible episode in which this was done. Rolin had a earpiece that looked like a hearing aid, but it was really a radio receiver. Barney put the moves into a computer and radioed the best move to Rolin. Just like the real-life Clement Allwermann affair in Germany a few years ago (see http://www.chesscafe.com/text/hans32.txt). Allwermann, a middle-aged 1900-player, suddenly had about a 2600 TPR in a major open, defeating several titled players. Turned out he had a keypad in his jacket, on which he tapped out moves in code to an accomplice in a hotel room. The accomplice fed the moves into a computer running Fritz, then radioed back to Allwermann through an earpiece hidden under his ample head of hair. |
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#3
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Hello,
Just like the real-life Clement Allwermann affair in Germany a few years ago (see http://www.chesscafe.com/text/hans32.txt). Allwermann, a middle-aged 1900-player, suddenly had about a 2600 TPR in a major open, defeating several titled players. Turned out he had a keypad in his jacket, on which he tapped out moves in code to an accomplice in a hotel room. The accomplice fed the moves into a computer running Fritz, then radioed back to Allwermann through an earpiece hidden under his ample head of hair. That has been indeed a big topic in the German chess scene, if you just mention the name "Allwermann" to any German tournament player, he knows what you are talking about. One final detail: in the last round he had beaten Kalinichev. When the GM resigned, Allwermann said it would be mate in eight anyway. The GM only smiled to this announcement. Allwermann got a bit angry about it and shouted: "Don't laugh, check it out!" Of course he was right. Later this game was shown to some world class players including Anand, and they laughed about such an announcement, as it is nearly impossible for a human player to find such a thing over the board. Greetings, Ralf |
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#4
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as it is nearly impossible for a human player to find such a thing over the board. Greetings, Ralf Wait a minute. Wasn't Capablanca able to do that? Even Botvinnik admitted that Capa's powers of calculation were phenomenal. EZoto |
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#5
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On Oct 27, 2:03 am, Ralf Callenberg wrote: Hello, Just like the real-life Clement Allwermann affair in Germany a few years ago (seehttp://www.chesscafe.com/text/hans32.txt). Allwermann, a middle-aged 1900-player, suddenly had about a 2600 TPR in a major open, defeating several titled players. Turned out he had a keypad in his jacket, on which he tapped out moves in code to an accomplice in a hotel room. The accomplice fed the moves into a computer running Fritz, then radioed back to Allwermann through an earpiece hidden under his ample head of hair. That has been indeed a big topic in the German chess scene, if you just mention the name "Allwermann" to any German tournament player, he knows what you are talking about. One final detail: in the last round he had beaten Kalinichev. When the GM resigned, Allwermann said it would be mate in eight anyway. The GM only smiled to this announcement. Allwermann got a bit angry about it and shouted: "Don't laugh, check it out!" Of course he was right. Later this game was shown to some world class players including Anand, and they laughed about such an announcement, as it is nearly impossible for a human player to find such a thing over the board. Yes, I believe it was his announcement of mate that first brought suspicion onto him. He should have kept his mouth shut if he knew what was good for him. |
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#6
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EZoto wrote:
as it is nearly impossible for a human player to find such a thing over the board. Wait a minute. Wasn't Capablanca able to do that? Capablanca's dead, baby. Capablanca's dead. Sometimes, mates in eight are fairly obvious -- say because it's effectively mate in three but the loser can keep making suicidal interpositions to delay the inevitable. In this case, though, the mate is by no means obvious: my copy of Fritz 8 takes a couple of minutes to find a mate in 12. (I think it's interesting that Hans Ree claimed in 1999 that `computers find this in a second'[1]: mine certainly doesn't and, while it's not so hot by modern standards, it's a hell of a lot faster than a 1999-vintage machine. My guess is that Ree's computer found a mate in eight fairly quickly but that there is actually a defence to it.q) The game is at http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1408315 The final position is 6rk/3Q3p/p2p1R2/8/2P1q1N1/1P5K/P6P/5R2 b - - 0 41 Dave. [1] http://www.chesscafe.com/text/hans32.txt -- David Richerby Frozen Electronic Game (TM): it's www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~davidr/ like a family board game but it uses electricity and it's frozen in a block of ice! |
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