Yesterday I decided to see how long it would take to solve one of my favourite positions of all time - the aesthetically very pretty but deadly move 23...Qg3!! played by Frank Marshall against Stepan Levitsky in 1912:
[d] 5rk1/pp4pp/4p3/2R3Q1/3n4/2q4r/P1P2PPP/5RK1 b - - 0 23
To be honest I was wondering if the machine could solve this at all, since the longest variation is something like around 10 ply before all the smoke clears and the pieces are off the board.
I was amazed, however, to find that Star Beryl solved this position in a mere 12 seconds! Yes, that's 12 seconds for a mere 4K program running on an incredibly modest processor that can't even hope to compete with a 6301Y, let alone a 6502

No question about it - this is amazing. I am starting to think that for practical play, this machine might even be better than the current Novag 16K programs, since (touch wood), it seems to be only slightly weaker, but it does not make those ocassional horrific blunders that the larger program makes (and which spoil otherwise good games).
That said, like even the best of the current Novags (Citrine, Star Ruby), the selective search can sometimes miss very obvious moves that other programs can pick up on quite easily. In this 40 moves in 2 hour game played yesterday, Beryl commits an inaccuracy in the opening leaving it fatally vulnerable on the A1 - H8 diagonal. The Saitek Maestro did not waste time inflicting a fatal blow. That makes the current match score between these two 1.5 - 0.5 in favour of Maestro.
[Event "40 in 2 Blair Athol"]
[Site "?"]
[Date "2007.05.12"]
[Round "?"]
[White "Saitek Maestro"]
[Black "Novag Star Beryl"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "D04"]
[PlyCount "107"]
[EventDate "2007.??.??"]
1. Nf3 d5 2. d4 Nf6 3. e3 g6 4. Nbd2 Nc6 5. Be2 e6 6. O-O Be7 7. b3 O-O 8. c4
Bd7 9. a3 Ne4 10. Nxe4 dxe4 11. Nd2 f5 12. Bb2 Re8 13. Rc1 Qc8 14. Qc2 Qd8 15.
d5 exd5 16. cxd5 f4 17. dxc6 Bxc6 18. Qc3 Bf6 19. Qxf6 Qxf6 20. Bxf6 Kf7 21.
Bg5 fxe3 22. fxe3+ Kg7 23. Bf6+ Kh6 24. g4 g5 25. Rc5 Rf8 26. Bb5 Bxb5 27. Rxb5
b6 28. Nxe4 c5 29. Rd1 Rae8 30. Bxg5+ Kg6 31. Rd6+ Kf7 32. Rf6+ Kg8 33. Bh6 Rf7
34. Rxf7 Kxf7 35. Nd6+ Kg6 36. Nxe8 Kxh6 37. e4 Kg5 38. b4 Kxg4 39. bxc5 bxc5
40. Rxc5 Kf3 41. e5 h5 42. e6 Ke3 43. Nd6 h4 44. e7 Kd4 45. Ra5 Kc3 46. Rxa7
Kd3 47. a4 Kd4 48. a5 Kd5 49. Rd7 h3 50. a6 Kc5 51. a7 Kc6 52. e8=Q Kb6 53. Qh5
Kc6 54. Qb5# 1-0