Game 1, black
5...Ngf6
Commentary for black move 5:
Mr. VALVO: It varies obviously but there are lots of positions
with good moves. One of the things computers use to figure out
what to look at, they have a thing called the alpha-beta search
and they have a thing that says well, gee unless a move is
better than a particular move, I'm not going to -- not even
going to look at others in this area. That saves them about 50
percent of the moves that they look at. So they do have some
ability in that area but not always.
Mr. ASHLEY: What did you use successfully in the Aegon
tournament, playing against computers?
Mr. SEIRAWAN: Let's see, pulling out the power cord helped a
lot. (Laughter.) Why are you laughing? It worked. Bribing
the operator, you know, simple things, simple things, really.
And really closing the position down. Again, what Michael was
saying is that the computer, when the computer is faced with an
opportunity of making a capture, well, that's where it's going
to focus all of its attention and all of those hundreds of
millions of moves a second suddenly become very, very useful to
have. So, by creating as large an opportunity of moves as
possible, then the computer starts looking at a lot of things
that aren't significant. We have another move.
Mr. ASHLEY: Kasparov has castled, --
Mr. VALVO: Bringing his --
Mr. SEIRAWAN: Bringing his king. This is known as building a
house. What Garry has done afianchettod his bishop, that is to
say putting his bishop on g2 directly in front of his king, his
knight on f3, a very nice little pawn shield, so that white's
king is nice and comfortably ensconced in his own little home
so that he will later turn his attention to the center. And I
just wanted to kind of set up ourselves here with a bit of our
props. What we have behind us in the middle screen is of
course the two-dimensional resentation of the chess game.
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