As to Peter, he runs the tourney as smooth as possible, even accomodating some stupid late comer arriving an hour late

cheers
Daniel
Moderator: Ras
Totaly agreed here....last week I made the big step to purchase and install Windows 7 x64 Ultimate and I must say that it's a fine product....fast,stable and error free....almost,I haven't seen one yet to admitM ANSARI wrote:Actually the latest 64bit Win 7 has been a really nice OS. I usually don't like to praise a MS OS, but really I think they got their act together here. The OS is fast, sleek with a small footprint and very stable.
Agreed.Dr.Wael Deeb wrote:Totaly agreed here....last week I made the big step to purchase and install Windows 7 x64 Ultimate and I must say that it's a fine product....fast,stable and error free....almost,I haven't seen one yet to admitM ANSARI wrote:Actually the latest 64bit Win 7 has been a really nice OS. I usually don't like to praise a MS OS, but really I think they got their act together here. The OS is fast, sleek with a small footprint and very stable.
http://www.cctchess.com/games.htmlmaxchgr wrote:where can I find the games?
Yes, that is indeed true. Historically, clusters haven't performed well enough to win. I used to have discussions with Steve Otto about this at work (he was involved with WayCool). He said he wished they had written a good single proc chess program before moving on to a super computer version. Seems that is what all of the past did - they jumped straight to a super computer. Now, the successes are coming from programs that started as single proc programs.Albert Silver wrote:Considering that huge clusters have more often not won, than won, it is a very nice victory. A hearty congrats to Gian-Carlo, and to Peter Skinner for a great tourney once again!Damir wrote:You forgot to mention it is using 128 cores cluster. On the other hand, It would be a complete failure, if it did not win the tournament...
Indeed. I was just playing through the pivotal and spectacular Hiarcs-Sjeng game. I'm curious, just how far into the game did Sjeng see clear compensation for the sacrificed piece after 25... Rxa2? In this game, I love how the Rb8 was left en-prise for fifteen moves. Hiarcs' later equalizing shots of 61. b5 and 62. c4 were also very impressive. How much of the resulting KBNR-KBQ endgame was determined by endgame databases?Highendman wrote:Respect to GCP and his Sjeng for winning. Are Sjeng and Rybka the only two engines that run on standard-PC Clusters?
Looking at the games though, I enjoyed some of Hiarcs wins more. Just a matter of taste.
We were both in book to move 50.IanO wrote:Indeed. I was just playing through the pivotal and spectacular Hiarcs-Sjeng game. I'm curious, just how far into the game did Sjeng see clear compensation for the sacrificed piece after 25... Rxa2? In this game, I love how the Rb8 was left en-prise for fifteen moves. Hiarcs' later equalizing shots of 61. b5 and 62. c4 were also very impressive. How much of the resulting KBNR-KBQ endgame was determined by endgame databases?Highendman wrote:Respect to GCP and his Sjeng for winning. Are Sjeng and Rybka the only two engines that run on standard-PC Clusters?
Looking at the games though, I enjoyed some of Hiarcs wins more. Just a matter of taste.
This would be a game worthy of publication with deep annotations.
[Event "CCT12"]
[Site "FICS"]
[Date "2010.02.20"]
[Round "5"]
[White "Hiarcs"]
[Black "SjengX"]
[Result "1/2-1/2"]
[WhiteElo "2389"]
[BlackElo "2570"]
[ECO "B80"]
1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.Be3 e6 7.f3 b5 8.Qd2 Nbd7
9.g4 b4 10.Na4 h6 11.O-O-O Ne5 12.Qxb4 Bd7 13.Bf4 g5 14.Bd2 Be7 15.h4 Rb8
16.Qa3 gxh4 17.Bb4 Qc7 18.Bxa6 O-O 19.Rxh4 Bxa4 20.Qxa4 Qb6 21.Bb5 Nxe4
22.Rh2 Nxf3 23.Nxf3 Ra8 24.Qb3 Qxb5 25.Re1 Rxa2 26.Rxe4 Ra1+ 27.Kd2 Qf1
28.Rhe2 Rb8 29.Qc3 Rd1+ 30.Ke3 Bd8 31.Qc6 Bb6+ 32.Kf4 Qh3 33.Bxd6 h5 34.
gxh5 Rf1 35.Rb4 Qh4+ 36.Ke5 Qxh5+ 37.Kf4 Qh4+ 38.Ke5 Qg3+ 39.Rf4 Qg7+ 40.
Rf6 Qg3+ 41.Ke4 Qg4+ 42.Rf4 Qg6+ 43.Ke5 Rd1 44.Rxf7 Rd5+ 45.Qxd5 Kxf7 46.
Kf4 Qf6+ 47.Kg4 exd5 48.Bxb8 Bd8 49.Be5 Qa6 50.Rh2 Qg6+ 51.Kf4 Qe4+ 52.Kg3
Ke8 53.Rh6 Bg5 54.Re6+ Be7 55.c3 Kd7 56.Rh6 Qc2 57.b4 Qd3 58.Rb6 Bd8 59.
Rb7+ Kc6 60.Rb8 Bb6 61.b5+ Qxb5 62.c4 Qb1 63.cxd5+ Kxd5 64.Bf4 Qg6+ 65.Ng5
Bd4 66.Rd8+ Kc4 67.Rd6 Qf5 68.Nf3 Bc5 69.Ne5+ Kb5 70.Rd8 Qh7 71.Rb8+ Ka6
72.Ra8+ Kb7 73.Rd8 Be7 74.Rd3 Ka6 75.Rd7 Qh4+ 76.Kf3 Kb5 77.Be3 Bb4 78.
Rd5+ Ka4 79.Rd3 Qf6+ 80.Ke4 Qe7 81.Bd4 Qh4+ 82.Kd5 Qd8+ 83.Ke4 Qg5 84.Bc3
Qh4+ 85.Kd5 Qh1+ 1/2-1/2
Harvey Williamson wrote:We were both in book to move 50.IanO wrote:Indeed. I was just playing through the pivotal and spectacular Hiarcs-Sjeng game. I'm curious, just how far into the game did Sjeng see clear compensation for the sacrificed piece after 25... Rxa2? In this game, I love how the Rb8 was left en-prise for fifteen moves. Hiarcs' later equalizing shots of 61. b5 and 62. c4 were also very impressive. How much of the resulting KBNR-KBQ endgame was determined by endgame databases?Highendman wrote:Respect to GCP and his Sjeng for winning. Are Sjeng and Rybka the only two engines that run on standard-PC Clusters?
Looking at the games though, I enjoyed some of Hiarcs wins more. Just a matter of taste.
This would be a game worthy of publication with deep annotations.
[Event "CCT12"]
[Site "FICS"]
[Date "2010.02.20"]
[Round "5"]
[White "Hiarcs"]
[Black "SjengX"]
[Result "1/2-1/2"]
[WhiteElo "2389"]
[BlackElo "2570"]
[ECO "B80"]
1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.Be3 e6 7.f3 b5 8.Qd2 Nbd7
9.g4 b4 10.Na4 h6 11.O-O-O Ne5 12.Qxb4 Bd7 13.Bf4 g5 14.Bd2 Be7 15.h4 Rb8
16.Qa3 gxh4 17.Bb4 Qc7 18.Bxa6 O-O 19.Rxh4 Bxa4 20.Qxa4 Qb6 21.Bb5 Nxe4
22.Rh2 Nxf3 23.Nxf3 Ra8 24.Qb3 Qxb5 25.Re1 Rxa2 26.Rxe4 Ra1+ 27.Kd2 Qf1
28.Rhe2 Rb8 29.Qc3 Rd1+ 30.Ke3 Bd8 31.Qc6 Bb6+ 32.Kf4 Qh3 33.Bxd6 h5 34.
gxh5 Rf1 35.Rb4 Qh4+ 36.Ke5 Qxh5+ 37.Kf4 Qh4+ 38.Ke5 Qg3+ 39.Rf4 Qg7+ 40.
Rf6 Qg3+ 41.Ke4 Qg4+ 42.Rf4 Qg6+ 43.Ke5 Rd1 44.Rxf7 Rd5+ 45.Qxd5 Kxf7 46.
Kf4 Qf6+ 47.Kg4 exd5 48.Bxb8 Bd8 49.Be5 Qa6 50.Rh2 Qg6+ 51.Kf4 Qe4+ 52.Kg3
Ke8 53.Rh6 Bg5 54.Re6+ Be7 55.c3 Kd7 56.Rh6 Qc2 57.b4 Qd3 58.Rb6 Bd8 59.
Rb7+ Kc6 60.Rb8 Bb6 61.b5+ Qxb5 62.c4 Qb1 63.cxd5+ Kxd5 64.Bf4 Qg6+ 65.Ng5
Bd4 66.Rd8+ Kc4 67.Rd6 Qf5 68.Nf3 Bc5 69.Ne5+ Kb5 70.Rd8 Qh7 71.Rb8+ Ka6
72.Ra8+ Kb7 73.Rd8 Be7 74.Rd3 Ka6 75.Rd7 Qh4+ 76.Kf3 Kb5 77.Be3 Bb4 78.
Rd5+ Ka4 79.Rd3 Qf6+ 80.Ke4 Qe7 81.Bd4 Qh4+ 82.Kd5 Qd8+ 83.Ke4 Qg5 84.Bc3
Qh4+ 85.Kd5 Qh1+ 1/2-1/2