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Here are 12 results for Rowe Charles in the games. Game_6113 Game_6112 Game_6111 Game_6110 Game_6105 Game_6100 Game_5824 Game_5823 Game_5820 Game_5817 Game_5813 Game_5808 There are at least 5 results for Rowe in the forum. Thibault de Vassal (2016-05-26 01:19:13) Bugs after the server crash Hi Sebastian! :) Ah.... that's... interesting. Could you copy-paste here a piece of the page and tell me (here or by email) what brower / system you use? Thanks! Normajean Yates (2009-02-05 04:19:20) Don & I - same pt fr diff directions:) Don - no use if hardware doesnt 'fit' software [engineer's way of putting it ;)] me - no use if software doesnt 'fit' hardware [programmer's way of putting it ;)] (prefix 'retired' to 'engineeer' & 'programmer' ) We are saying the same thing! Another point: debugging parallel programs is much more tricky than debugging - uh - non-'parallel' programs I have no engineering experience [1] but I'd venture to guess that a 'parallel' electronic machine of any kind [not necessarily a computer] which has to synchronise signals from various sources, and do it fast, would be much more of a design challenge than a non-'parallel' one... [1] (well I did assemble my first personal-computer - a BBC[2] acorn - by cannibalising parts from discarded damaged BBC acorns and some borrowed parts - with a scope and a soldering iron - does that count? But that was back in 1983-84... and I had help....) [2] yes, BBC = beeb (British Broadcasting Corporation) - they *used* to do meaningful things - but that was long ago.... Thibault de Vassal (2008-08-08 13:19:10) MoGo wins ! (estimated 2 dans) I just read it in the American Go E-Journal, MoGo computer program defeated Myungwan Kim 8P by 1.5 points in a 9-stone game billed as “Humanity’s Last Stand?” The professional player estimated MoGo’s current strength at “two or maybe three dan”, “made some 5-dan moves” (the program used 800 processors, at 4.7 Ghz, 15 Teraflops on a borrowed European supercomputer) Strangely, Kim easily won two blitz games with 9 stones and 11 stones and lost one with 12 stones and 15 minutes by 3.5 points before this one hour game. http://senseis.xmp.net/?MoGo http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_Go James Stripes (2006-12-16 16:21:38) Rybka vs Kramnik When Rybka defeats the top human in a match, it will earn something far more important than demonstrating its prowess over silicone opponents. Don Groves (2006-11-21 00:45:58) Go: Komi Hi Thibault, I'm confused as to why elo ratings matter. Go has used komi a long time to compensate for the first move while chess never has. But in chess, you have narrower rating groups, so practically never is an expert matched against a novice. Since in Go we have only three rating groups, these uneven matches happen many times. Until we have enough Go players to have more rating groups, a sliding komi scale would be a way to level the playing field a bit. PS - I'm not interested in traditional Go handicap games -- the empty board is the only true way to begin, IMHO. There are 1 results for Rowe in wikichess. Thibault de Vassal (2522) d4 Queen's Pawn Game refer to any chess opening which starts with 1.d4, the second most popular opening move, but is now usually used to describe openings where White opens with 1.d4 but does not follow through with an early pawn advance to c4. Some of these openings have individual names as well. In the 1800s and early 1900s, 1.e4 was by far the most common opening move by White, while the different openings starting with 1.d4 were considered somewhat unusual and therefore classed together as "Queen's Pawn Game". As the merits of 1.d4 started to be explored it was the Queen's Gambit which was played most often; more popular than all other 1.d4 openings combined. The term "Queen's Pawn Game" was then narrowed down to any opening with 1.d4 which was not a Queen's Gambit. Eventually, through the efforts of the hypermodernists, the various Indian Defences, such as the King's Indian, Nimzo-Indian and Queen's Indian, became more popular, and as these openings were named, the term "Queen's Pawn Game" narrowed further. According to Chessbase, white chances are about 58% ============ Contributors : Thibault de Vassal
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