It means that BayesElo calculates that Hydra, according to these games, has a 95% chance of having a true Elo between 2798 and 3031. The uncertainty is probably really larger because some of the statistical assumptions are not strictly met. For instance, Adams first game with Hydra probably affected his later games, so the games were not fully independent of each other. Statistics never prove anything, but at some point we, as humans, will make up our minds. For me Deep Blue didn't play enough games to convince me, but Hydra did. Your mileage may vary.mschribr wrote:What is the minus column? What is the minus 74 for hydra? Could that give hydra a 2798?Dirt wrote:BayesElo output for all the GM games with Hydra I found for 2004-5:Dirt wrote:The nine games against Ponomariov and Adams were way above championship level, which I think outweighs the few others being somewhat less.Using a prior of 1, and an offset selected to make the Elo of Hydra's opponents match their weighted average (2687). Kasparov was around 2810 at the time.Code: Select all
Rank Name Elo + - games score oppo. draws 1 Hydra 2872 159 74 18 86% 2687 28% 2 Veselin Topalov 2857 383 392 1 50% 2872 100% 3 Alexander Khalifman 2857 383 392 1 50% 2872 100% 4 Rustam Kasimdzhanov 2782 271 395 2 25% 2872 50% 5 Sergey Karjakin 2738 341 917 1 0% 2872 0% 6 Evgeny Vladimirov 2685 195 393 4 13% 2872 25% 7 Adams,Mi 2629 164 387 6 8% 2872 17% 8 Ruslan Ponomariov 2612 204 865 3 0% 2872 0%
When did the Computer Surpass Man?
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Re: When did the Computer Surpass Man?
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Re: When did the Computer Surpass Man?
Anything from
when a machine first beat a chess expert in a public game, to when a machine wins all games against a world champion.
To narrow that down a little, I'd say anything between when a computer first beats an IM, to when a computer never loses a game to any human, would show that machine has surpassed man.
In the second case, that would easily translate something like when David Levy was beaten (was it a match actually?), till, not yet overtaken.
I go in for the "not yet overtaken".
When no human can any longer win even a single game, then machine would have overtaken man, for sure.
Until then, humans are still beating machines, and one might still be able to argue that humans still know how to do it.
when a machine first beat a chess expert in a public game, to when a machine wins all games against a world champion.
To narrow that down a little, I'd say anything between when a computer first beats an IM, to when a computer never loses a game to any human, would show that machine has surpassed man.
In the second case, that would easily translate something like when David Levy was beaten (was it a match actually?), till, not yet overtaken.
I go in for the "not yet overtaken".
When no human can any longer win even a single game, then machine would have overtaken man, for sure.
Until then, humans are still beating machines, and one might still be able to argue that humans still know how to do it.
Re: When did the Computer Surpass Man?
Terry, you said "Unless you're a very strong player you can't assess Deep Blue's play versus Kasparov's."
Are you saying you can assess Deep Blue's play versus Kasparov? I checked your Canadien chess rating--- 1750. I got a real kick from your post a while back about Beating GMs mano a mano.
Terry, you seem to know a little bit about a lot of things---unfortunately, chess aint one of 'em.
Are you saying you can assess Deep Blue's play versus Kasparov? I checked your Canadien chess rating--- 1750. I got a real kick from your post a while back about Beating GMs mano a mano.
Terry, you seem to know a little bit about a lot of things---unfortunately, chess aint one of 'em.
