phhnguyen wrote: ↑Mon Aug 20, 2018 5:14 pm
duncan wrote: ↑Mon Aug 20, 2018 2:29 pm
Sesse wrote:
These things tend to be exponential. In particular, you'd need a machine with a lot more RAM than 1TB.
I thought roughly speaking you need 60 times more hard disk and ram for each extra piece.
I’m sure the factor should be much smaller than 60. Long time ago someone has already predicted that building Syzygy 7 men would take 1TB Ram and 3-5 years. Actually it took not that RAM size and only 5 months!
7 men is about 17 times larger than 6 men. Thus I guess the factor for 8 men is reasonably about 10-25. Magic may happens again
according to this 7 man is 113 times bigger than 6 man
https://en.chessbase.com/post/endgame-t ... rt-history
Until the advent of the compressed Nalimov Tablebases, Edwards' Tablebases were quite popular and used in several chess programs, such as Crafty, Gromit, and the commercial MChess Pro, to name a few. The only problem was that the full five-piece set alone was well over 50 GB! Furthermore, if you consider that each additional piece to a tablebase takes up about 160 times more space, then a full six-piece set could be expected to need roughly ten terabytes of space or 10,000 GB. If today 10 TB still seems like a lot, imagine 25 years ago. Enter Nalimov.
...
Contrary to previous versions of the bases which took on the names of their creators, de Man chose to call them Syzygy (pronounced Sih-Zih-Gee), which means a pair of connected or corresponding things. These new bases are not only best suited for multithread searches, but the full set also takes up a mere 150 GB. As such, they are now the de facto choice for use with an engine.