Print Story I thought it best to skip Wings Night
Diary
By gzt (Tue Apr 15, 2008 at 12:00:05 PM EST) chess, gzt (all tags)
For my own safety and yours. Instead, I played some chess. Not really so much playing as going over annotated games and then lying in bed with Polgar's brick until I fell asleep. Today was a basic day, it was some Chernev collection for patzers and the mates-in-one. Gotta drill the basics sometimes.


Got like five calls, so I left a garbled voicemail in return about not going. Felt good. Did some laundry.

Now I'm using the work printers to print out the PDFs of some chess book. Pachman has some interesting comments about computers and chess which are interesting now, since they were published in 1978. He essentially says that computers will never be successful because they are incapable of playing strategically, as basic principles are only capable of taking you so far (say, to third-category strength) and the rest of the what separates the rank amateur from the master is knowledge of the exceptions to the rules which are gained from experience in playing and analyzing concrete examples. This is interesting for two reasons: first, it turns out he's wrong, computers can become phenomenally strong even though there are some things they don't do as well as humans (especially that area); second, later writers like Watson knock Pachman and previous writers of strategy manuals because they don't seem to teach about such exceptions. Clearly, though, the relation is a bit more complex. He is also completely and utterly incorrect about one thing: he says computers will never be good at concrete calculation of tactical variations because there are too many variations to look at and too many little exceptions to rules in them. However, it turns out that calculation of tactical variations is the only thing computers are good at. The tactical problems which he gives as examples of how a computer would fail in 1978 are now solved instantly and in a more accurate fashion than Pachman could manage (though I don't think he made any errors in his analysis).

Have the afternoon off for a couple $SPORTS games. It's like 15 degrees out, so should be nice.

Nobody is in the office today. I noticed a major problem with the executive summary reports we sent out yesterday, but it won't be a big deal. I fixed them and sent an e-mail somewhere, but it's already too late to get it fixed in time for the executive team meeting.

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I thought it best to skip Wings Night | 2 comments (2 topical, 0 hidden) | Trackback
so you let the wing haters get you down by sasquatchan (2.00 / 0) #1 Tue Apr 15, 2008 at 04:18:04 PM EST
about wing night ?

I thought deep blue's strength was on having "memorized" some (large) X number of end-games, so after getting to the end-game, could reliably say win/lose/resign.



No. by gzt (2.00 / 0) #2 Wed Apr 16, 2008 at 10:46:59 AM EST
Though computers do have access to large endgame databases (5 and 6 piece endgames have been completely solved), that's remarkably unhelpful except for bizarre trivia. I mean, to play the endgame well, you have to be able to get to an endgame and get to an endgame in good shape.

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I thought it best to skip Wings Night | 2 comments (2 topical, 0 hidden) | Trackback