Sure, these guys are great in memorizing lines.Terry McCracken wrote:Check how close the lines and level of play really are. Closer than you give credit.
Switch to chess960, and you'd see what a real machine power means.
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Sure, these guys are great in memorizing lines.Terry McCracken wrote:Check how close the lines and level of play really are. Closer than you give credit.
I don't care about chess 960 and it's irrelavent to this discussion AFAIC.Milos wrote:Sure, these guys are great in memorizing lines.Terry McCracken wrote:Check how close the lines and level of play really are. Closer than you give credit.
Switch to chess960, and you'd see what a real machine power means.
Actually this game also exposes the weaknesses of engines quite a bit. Stockfish and other engines thought the position after Nd2 was just losing for white.AdminX wrote:Well it appears that Ivan Cheparinov had prepared the Novelty for him that went twenty moves deep into this game.
"At the press conference the Bulgarian said that it was his second Ivan Cheparinov who had prepared the line for him."
[d]8/8/4q1kp/1Q4p1/2p3P1/2Pp4/5NK1/8 w - - 0 42
With 42. Qa4! White could have prevented the black pawn going to d2. 42... Qd5+ (42... d2? 43. Qc2+ ) 43. Kf1 Qe6 44. Qa2! Qd5 (44... Qc6 45. Qa1! Qd5 46. Qe1! ) 45. Qa6+ Kg7 46. Qa7+ Kg6 47. Qe3! +/- Shipov. {Also Stockfish 1.7.1}
Source: http://www.chessvibes.com/reports/wch-g ... more-24861
Do you want to say that humans are better memorizing opening book lines than computers?Milos wrote:Sure, these guys are great in memorizing lines.Terry McCracken wrote:Check how close the lines and level of play really are. Closer than you give credit.
Switch to chess960, and you'd see what a real machine power means.
I do not see +0.5 after Qa4 h5 gxh5+ Kxh5 Qa7shiv wrote:Actually this game also exposes the weaknesses of engines quite a bit. Stockfish and other engines thought the position after Nd2 was just losing for white.AdminX wrote:Well it appears that Ivan Cheparinov had prepared the Novelty for him that went twenty moves deep into this game.
"At the press conference the Bulgarian said that it was his second Ivan Cheparinov who had prepared the line for him."
[d]8/8/4q1kp/1Q4p1/2p3P1/2Pp4/5NK1/8 w - - 0 42
With 42. Qa4! White could have prevented the black pawn going to d2. 42... Qd5+ (42... d2? 43. Qc2+ ) 43. Kf1 Qe6 44. Qa2! Qd5 (44... Qc6 45. Qa1! Qd5 46. Qe1! ) 45. Qa6+ Kg7 46. Qa7+ Kg6 47. Qe3! +/- Shipov. {Also Stockfish 1.7.1}
Source: http://www.chessvibes.com/reports/wch-g ... more-24861
And this Qa4 position is another case in point, what if black just plays 42.. h5 after Qa4 trading the g-pawn. I tried with engines and yes you will see a +0.5 which keeps going down, but the engines are just evaluating the position, there is no win of course.. Shipov of course has caught on the engine disease. I might be proven wrong but positions like occurred in the game are confusing for both humans and engines. For the same reason, I do not trust the +0.44 after Qh3 either. Just shows how complex a game chess is.
For several other moves in the game, I turned on the engine, but found unreliable evaluations.
Nope. I want to say, humans are much better in forcing particular memorized lines (engines are really lousy in that). And yes they are really good in pattern matching. But as you know pattern matching is deja vu, a sort of permanent cache. And when they run out of cache, humans quickly fall apart against machine...Edmund wrote:Do you want to say that humans are better memorizing opening book lines than computers?
It is no problem for a machine to store gigabytes of chess databases, but for a human? He just prepares certain lines and is cleverer in the choice of move order not to leave the opening book too early. This in combination with broad pattern recognition makes him appear to have a great opening book repertoar, but you could never argue that he has a competitive advantage over the machine.