Anand-Topalov
#1
Posted 2010-May-04, 07:16
George Carlin
#2
Posted 2010-May-04, 10:51
han: 11:43 am
(11:43:50 AM): why doesn't he surrender like a man?
jlall :11:48 am
(11:48:43 AM): what
(11:48:46 AM): he resigned
(11:50:14 AM): lol
lol, hanp rules!
#3
Posted 2010-May-04, 11:59
When I was a kid, I had to wait for a newspaper to print the moves, and sometimes they even messed that up. Now that I'm thinking about it, I also realize once again how much I appreciate the vugraph presentations on BBO...
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists that is why they invented hell. Bertrand Russell
#4
Posted 2010-May-04, 12:11
#5
Posted 2010-May-04, 12:25
Jlall, on May 4 2010, 11:51 AM, said:
han: 11:43 am
(11:43:50 AM): why doesn't he surrender like a man?
jlall :11:48 am
(11:48:43 AM): what
(11:48:46 AM): he resigned
(11:50:14 AM): lol
lol, hanp rules!
Weren't there some FU shut ups in between?
#6
Posted 2010-May-04, 13:26
Aberlour10, on May 4 2010, 01:11 PM, said:
They use computers AND humans for preperations, and a lot of both!
Everyone knows that computers are better players than humans now, but not everyone seems to realize that a computer with human assistance will always beat the top computer.
But as far as preparation obviously you need human guidance there.
#7
Posted 2010-May-04, 13:27
hanp, on May 4 2010, 01:25 PM, said:
Jlall, on May 4 2010, 11:51 AM, said:
han: 11:43 am
(11:43:50 AM): why doesn't he surrender like a man?
jlall :11:48 am
(11:48:43 AM): what
(11:48:46 AM): he resigned
(11:50:14 AM): lol
lol, hanp rules!
Weren't there some FU shut ups in between?
FU STFU
#8
Posted 2010-May-04, 13:49
Jlall, on May 4 2010, 02:26 PM, said:
In general terms why is this?
#9
Posted 2010-May-04, 13:49
George Carlin
#10
Posted 2010-May-04, 13:53
jdonn, on May 4 2010, 02:49 PM, said:
Jlall, on May 4 2010, 02:26 PM, said:
In general terms why is this?
Because humans and computers have different strengths. A human might see a long-term plan that is very promising ("bring the bishop to e7, the rock on f6 and i don't see how black could save this position") and then use a computer to check it tactically ("Oops, if I first bring the bishop to e7 I get mated in 7 moves, so lets try starting with the rock - YEAH it works!")
#11
Posted 2010-May-04, 13:59
#12
Posted 2010-May-04, 14:18
jdonn, on May 4 2010, 02:59 PM, said:
Basically the problem is that the computer would have to analyze all long term plans.
Human experts are good at narrowing the set of reasonable moves. They can quickly reject certain actions as being bad "from experience" or based on the appearance of a result position, with a high degree of accuracy. Computers are bad at this, and typically deal with the problem by just trying all the moves and progressing down the game tree until the position becomes obviously bad even to an intermediate-level player. This obviously takes a long time, but computers are fast...
In any case, combining the human expert ability to quickly eliminate bad moves and positions with the computer ability to simulate down the game tree for a large number of moves is quite potent. Basically, the computer can consider millions (but perhaps not billions or trillions) of positions in a reasonable amount of time (which humans can't do) but the human input helps the computer avoid wasting its time on "obviously bad" positions from which any human expert would quickly resign.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#13
Posted 2010-May-04, 14:43
#14
Posted 2010-May-04, 14:56
http://www.chessbase...asp?newsid=6307
Quote
and Anand resigned
George Carlin
#15
Posted 2010-May-04, 15:48
Humans can force computers to evaluate things like the pawn sacrifice more deeply etc (or at all).
#16
Posted 2010-May-04, 15:54
#17
Posted 2010-May-04, 15:55
See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blunder_%28ch...ladimir_Kramnik
#18
Posted 2010-May-04, 16:02
jdonn, on May 4 2010, 04:54 PM, said:
Obviously, I don't really get your point?
The fact that chess and go are not solved is because of lack of processing power. They are games of perfect information. With infinite processing power, we would know everything about perfect information games.
#19
Posted 2010-May-04, 16:33
Did you know I once came in 3rd in my county in high school chess? Frightening. I know of at least one (at the time) 11 year old girl and one 7 year old boy who were both clearly better than I was, not to mention 4 or 5 people who played in the actual event. But that me, who may have been as high as a 1300 player, would slaughter the current me who I doubt is even a 1000 player.
#20
Posted 2010-May-04, 17:58
rogerclee, on May 4 2010, 03:55 PM, said:
See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blunder_%28ch...ladimir_Kramnik
i hadn't seen this before. pretty epic.
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