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| Tags: beat, best, getclubbeginner, level, rybka |
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#11
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Here is a game where Normal Level was able to fight till 38 Moves
against Rybka (Hard Level) Game Played between sanjay11 and normal at GetClub.com -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- sanjay11: (White) normal: (Black) Game Played at: http://www.GetClub.com/Chess.html View Recorded Game: http://www.getclub.com/playgame.php?...861&game=Chess -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- White -- Black (sanjay11) -- (normal) 1. e2-e4{4} c7-c6{0} 2. Nb1-c3{44} d7-d5{110} 3. e4-d5{18} c6-d5{116} 4. Bf1-b5{20} Nb8-c6{120} 5. Ng1-f3{14} Qd8-d6{114} 6. Ke1-g1{18} g7-g6{124} 7. d2-d4{16} Bc8-f5{110} 8. Nf3-e5{26} f7-f6{134} 9. Bc1-f4{28} Qd6-e6{82} 10. Ne5-d3{20} Ra8-d8{142} 11. Bf4-c7{22} Rd8-c8{104} 12. Bc7-g3{16} a7-a6{140} 13. Rf1-e1{14} Qe6-f7{152} 14. Bb5-a4{24} b7-b5{110} 15. Ba4-b3{18} Nc6-d4{132} 16. Bb3-d5{18} e7-e6{98} 17. Nd3-f4{20} Bf8-c5{90} 18. Nc3-e4{18} Bf5-e4{104} 19. Re1-e4{16} f6-f5{80} 20. Re4-e5{24} Rc8-d8{152} 21. c2-c3{22} Ng8-e7{104} 22. c3-d4{16} Bc5-d6{84} 23. Nf4-e6{18} Ne7-d5{146} 24. Ne6-g5{18} Bd6-e5{84} 25. Ng5-f7{20} Ke8-f7{114} 26. Bg3-e5{14} Rh8-e8{104} 27. Qd1-c1{30} Kf7-g8{126} 28. Qc1-c6{12} f5-f4{140} 29. Qc6-a6{56} b5-b4{204} 30. Ra1-c1{22} f4-f3{130} 31. Rc1-c6{16} Kg8-f8{90} 32. Rc6-f6{20} Kf8-g8{80} 33. Rf6-g6{24} Kg8-f8{96} 34. Rg6-g3{20} Kf8-e7{152} 35. Rg3-g7{24} Ke7-f8{146} 36. Rg7-h7{48} Re8-e7{118} 37. Rh7-h8{16} Kf8-f7{98} 38. Rh8-d8{20} Nd5-f6{90} -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- sanjay11: (White) normal: (Black) Game Played at: http://www.GetClub.com/Chess.html View Recorded Game: http://www.getclub.com/playgame.php?...861&game=Chess Nowadays no one is able to spot mistakes in GetClub Game. Is it very tough to analyze these games. Still if you find mistake in GetClubs game tell me So that I can improve the game. Are the game lost to Rybka because of poor Calculations or it is because Depth of Analysis of Rybka is higher. Normal Level thinks 14 depth deep. How much deep does Rybka think? Bye Sanny Play Chess at: http://www.GetClub.com/Chess.html |
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#12
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On Feb 19, 8:20 am, Sanny wrote:
Rybka beat GetClubs Normal Level in just 25 Moves. Game Played between Rybka and normal at GetClub.com. Why do Normal Level Lost to Rybka? Which were the Wrong Moves that Normal Level Made? -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Rybka : (White) normal: (Black) Here, the GetClub program first went wrong when it sat down to play. Yet the crowd did not truly guffaw until it saw GC's moves... . -- eval. bot |
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#13
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On Feb 19, 10:57 am, "webfilelib" wrote:
I have a question about fairness: If computer programs are allowed to have opening's books (i.e. human-aided analysis) when playing against humans... then why can't humans have endgame analysis from a hand-held calculator when playing against computers? Because, only the computers are allowed to cheat at chess. When humans do this sort of thing, they are summarily whipped, keel-hulled, or at the very least ostracized, excommunicated, and labeled left-wing radical lunatic-fringers. You may recall a game or two in which humans pitted Bobby Fischer against the dreadful Greenblatt program; so horrible was the slaughter that from that time forward, it was decided to just allow computers to cheat at will! This seemed only fair at the time... . -- fairness bot |
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#14
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On Feb 19, 11:12 am, Mike Murray wrote:
channel the game away from anti-computer strategies -- human analysis is of too low quality to help the silicon monsters these days. Whoa there, fella! You may speak for yourself, but a few of us happen to know better. Computers with no openings book still founder in the opening. For example, many a book has been written in which it is carefully explained how blocking the c-pawn early with N-c3 or N-c6 constricts one's own pieces; yet even the very best programs will do exactly this, if you disable their openings books. Now, while weak players may argue that perhaps these monstrosities "know better" than the authors of those books, real chess players understand that it is merely an indication that they have been programmed poorly in this area of the game. Think of the famous game in which DeepBlue, or some other killer program, was stomping all over GM Karpov, UNTIL it had to choose between grabbing lots of pawns, or keeping the opponent from getting far-advanced connected passers which could not be stopped; the clueless, materialist program grabbed the pawns as a matter of course, judging it obtained a hefty material advantage, only to lose the game like a carrot. Don't deceive yourself into thinking that these new programs are near to perfection; they are better than us, but that is no reason to give them very much credit at all. It is still apparent that they suffer from the dreaded horizon effect, that they will play for spite checks in order to push the fact that they are making zero head- way beyond their own sight-lines, much like an ostrich which buries its head in the sand. I believe that human analysis can still help these programs, but it needs to be of the highest quality-- not the type of stuff typically found published in Chess Lies magazine, which I find is easily refuted by these very programs, sans books and sans table-bases! -- help bot |
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