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| Tags: flashlight, match, training |
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#1
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I didn't feel too bad when mainframe computers could beat me. And
when I got whipped by desktops and laptops...., well, they're are strong as mainframes once were. But it's harder to feel OK about losing to the cell phone. If the flashlight beats me, I might challenge the can-opener. |
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#2
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Mike Murray wrote:
I didn't feel too bad when mainframe computers could beat me. And when I got whipped by desktops and laptops...., well, they're are strong as mainframes once were. But it's harder to feel OK about losing to the cell phone. If the flashlight beats me, I might challenge the can-opener. I once bought a can-opener that when brand new, worked like "magic" -- gently snatching the can from my hand, pulling it into the blade, spinning and cutting and next releasing the now-open can. Well, that was then, this is now; the "magic" can- opener eventually wore out, and was discarded. The creators of the next version of Rybka -- the world's strongest chess engine -- started off talking about numbers like 3100+ (FIDE, I presume), but delving deeper, one learns that this is mostly hype. In reality, the rating gain from the current version is likely to be far less-- as they tell us themselves in a recent interview. The trouble with chess-playing flashlights is they don't have the brain-power to play well. In fact, all they need is a tiny chip, to shut down the LED(s) after, say, ten minutes without any detected motion, to conserve the 2 megavolt nano-lithium battery by going into stand-by mode. Chess, you see, is a very difficult game... . -- help bot |
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#3
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help bot wrote:
Mike Murray wrote: I didn't feel too bad when mainframe computers could beat me. And when I got whipped by desktops and laptops...., well, they're are strong as mainframes once were. But it's harder to feel OK about losing to the cell phone. If the flashlight beats me, I might challenge the can-opener. I once bought a can-opener that when brand new, worked like "magic" -- gently snatching the can from my hand, pulling it into the blade, spinning and cutting and next releasing the now-open can. Well, that was then, this is now; the "magic" can- opener eventually wore out, and was discarded. The creators of the next version of Rybka -- the world's strongest chess engine -- started off talking about numbers like 3100+ (FIDE, I presume), but delving deeper, one learns that this is mostly hype. In reality, the rating gain from the current version is likely to be far less-- as they tell us themselves in a recent interview. The trouble with chess-playing flashlights is they don't have the brain-power to play well. In fact, all they need is a tiny chip, to shut down the LED(s) after, say, ten minutes without any detected motion, to conserve the 2 megavolt nano-lithium battery by going into stand-by mode. Chess, you see, is a very difficult game... . Yes, yes bot & it still has nothing to do with your rybka love affair 'scuse me for a min bot [Mr Innes please http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Straw_Dogs thks.] You see what I ascertained about my American cousins was their predisposition to love the machine _over all_ in German this is translated as *uber alle* - the negative connotations of which I'm happy to see transported into the c-21 so no one is allowed to escape their manifest fiendishness - so if we forget the hun, their two-time big-time losses in the previous century & concentrate on robotics the ineluctable corollary is that you bot might as well be living in downtown Munich because you've anthromorphised rybka into a she - this piece of plastic, silicon & solder has a gender? - haw haw & do tell!.. t. |
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#4
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On Jul 23, 9:36 am, thumbody wrote:
Yes, yes bot & it still has nothing to do with your rybka love affair 'scuse me for a min bot [Mr Innes please http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Straw_Dogsthks.] You see what I ascertained about my American cousins was their predisposition to love the machine _over all_ in German this is translated as *uber alle* - the negative connotations of which I'm happy to see transported into the c-21 so no one is allowed to escape their manifest fiendishness - so if we forget the hun, their two-time big-time losses in the previous century & concentrate on robotics the ineluctable corollary is that you bot might as well be living in downtown Munich because you've anthromorphised rybka into a she - this piece of plastic, silicon & solder has a gender? - haw haw & do tell!.. Ah, the level of your "understanding" is thus revealed... when you elude to the Rybka chess engine as a piece of computer /hardware/. Smarter folks (like say, Sanny and Rob Mitchell) might recognize the difference between hard wares and soft ones; between /worship/ of state-of-the-art skill and simply rightful recognition thereof. But such subtleties would be beyond your grasp, I expect. FYI: it was I, Ensign Pulver, who first critiqued the Rybka program for "her" problems with Nc3/...Nc6, blocking in her Queen like a (human) rank beginner. This issue was "confirmed" if you will, by a human grandmaster (who unfortunately, was unable to withstand the heat in rgc). But the fact remains that this grotesque flaw is well-hidden behind a mask of openings-by-rote play, not unlike what we see in OTB tourneys between humans of all levels. Anyway, thanks for the free German lesson. I had a class in German in elementary school, but instead of teaching us useful phrases like "don't shoot!" or "where can I find a public restroom?", it was "das ist eine ecatsa", und "das ist eine hund". Now I ask you, even if I were to one day travel to Germany, where would such knowledge get me? (This ist nine rocket-science.) -- help bot |
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