Game 5, white
21.Kb1
Commentary for white move 21:
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Well, we became world champion in 1994,
and
since then nothing has happened. Basically they ignore us.
They now know that computers are better than all the humans,
but it hasn't diminished the game in one way. People still
play in tournaments, they enjoy the competition, they have a
lot of fun.
GK MOVE: 2 1 Kb1
MAURICE ASHLEY: Kasparov has also moved his king off the
possible sensitive diagonal to the square b1.
Continue.
MIKE VALVO: I was just wondering, Jonathan is also a
well-known
computer chess programmer as well. He had a machine in a
number of events that I ran. It was called Phoenix. Before
chinook, he went over to chinook. I'd like to ask you why you
gave up on chess computers, first of all, and I'd like you to
continue on what has happened to the checker world since the
wormed champion is now a machine.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Do you want the honest answer?
MIKE VALVO: Well, I don't want a dishonest one.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Well, I know Murray Campbell very well. In
fact by strange coincidence in 1974 we both were in the
Canadian junior chess championship and we played in the second
round.
MAURICE ASHLEY: Murray Campbell being a member of the Deep
Blue
team.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: So we've known each other for a long, long
time. 1989 at a sabbatical at Carnegie-Mellon where Feng Hsu
and Murray Campbell were at and I heard about of course the
Deep Blue -- or the IBM arrangement, and I began to think about
my prospects with my chess program. Although it was one of the
best in the world, one person working part time with no money
on a chess program, it's very difficult to compete with the
Deep Blue people having several people full time and the full
backing of IBM. And coincidentally at that time I started
tinkering with the checkers program and I made the decision if
I wanted to win with a chess program it was the wrong place to
be simply because of too much competition.
MIKE VALVO: Let me ask you a tickling kind of question. Is
checkers easier than chess?
AUDIENCE MEMBER: First of all, I'm a chess player. I got
involved in check /SKPERZ didn't know anything about it. I
heard a lot of people say who cares about checkers, it's such
an easy game.
MIKE VALVO: Jonathan is a Chessmaster, by the way.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: I also heard someone say Samuel solved the
game
of checkers in 1963.
MIKE VALVO: That wasn't true, right?
MIKE VALVO: A historical accident. What you can say about
chess
and checkers is there there's 10 to the 45th approximately
possible chess positions, there's a 1 followed by 45
/SKPWHRAOERZ. Checkers is only a 1 followed by 20 zeros, so
you can say --
MIKE VALVO: Relatively nothing.
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