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Hans Aberg wrote on Thu, Apr 24, 2008 06:57 PM UTC:
Reinhard Scharnagl:
| It is pure luck, that chess computer program strengths accompanied our masters for a time.
| Nobody will try to win a sprint against a Porsche, because the difference is even more obvious. So 
| it does not tell anything about how to handle a subject, when different species are competing.

The computer programs for orthodox chess succeeds in part because the number of positions required for achieving a good lookahead is fairly small relative to the capacity of the most powerful computers.

If one designs a chess variant with more material in a way that it is still very strategic to humans, then it will be harder for computers to be good on that variant, as the number of positions that must be searched for will be much larger.

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