Als Antwort auf: / As an answer to: Re: please geschrieben von: / posted by: John Grant at 20 May 2000 03:34:48:
Hi "WYx",Dear "WYx",Crux 1.2R was the winner of this game !!(I think so)...I was eating and was surprised that Amy 0.7 lost and was just going to save the game to floppy disk when I had to re-start Windows98I observed a WinBoard game (on P-III 450 MHz 128 MB SD-RAM hash size of 32MB for both programs at the time control of 40 moves every 60 minutes) a victory for (as I remembered) Crux 1.2R as White over Amy as Black. The highlight of this game was an outstanding "human-like" exchange by Amy; the Black Bishop and Knight were traded for the White Pawn on f2 and Rook on f1 soon after White castled (on the King-side:O-O).
...and, which is the Winner?
regards
WYx... I lost the game.
Regards from John
My memory after a normal night's sleep thinking about this game was better. The result is more likely the other way around ... in this game Crux 1.2R played Black and Amy 0.7 played White, I was really disappointed that one side won. "Hats off" anyway to both programs for the human-like exchange...I learnt a valuable lesson that in longer time control it is very useful to have in the amy.rc file "autosave=true" not false and put in the folder "save games" within the "Amy"folder within the "Winboard"folder.
Sorry for my mistake ... even in the memory of 30 years ago I was doubtful until recently that I played with "Ian Rogers"...I watched him in an interview talking with Peter Svidler on avi no.12 on ChessBase Magazine No.67 Extra CD-Format.
That's real life "WYx"
Regards from John.
This is a prayer answered quickly by angels telling "Crux" what to do !? Crux has the meaning of : to the point or dot of the matter, as my mother explained to me. The human-like exchange was seen in this game
Exchess3_14 - Crux01_6R Computer chess game ponder off P-III 450 Mhz RAM 128MB 32MB hash size 21.05.2000 40 moves every 3600 seconds
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.Bb5 Bb4 5.a3 Bc5 6.0-0 0-0 7.d3 Ng4 8.Bg5 Nxf2 9.Rxf2 Bxf2+ 10.Kxf2 f6 11.Bd2 Nb8
12.Kg1 c6 13.Bc4+ Kh8 14.Be3 d6 15.Nh4 Bd7 16.Qf3 Be8 17.Qf2 b6 18.d4 exd4 19.Bxd4 Bf7 20.Be2 Re8 21.Rd1 Be6
22.Be3 Qc7 23.Bf4 Qf7 24.Bxd6 *
With happy answers from the computer!
Regards from John.