Rebel (to hyatt) wrote:With your influence you could ask Jaap (since he wrote the contract with Nintendo) for the person to contact at Nintendo and provide Fabien with that information.
Even assuming that Jaap wrote the contract (in 2007), I don't see any reason for him to know "the person to contact" at Nintendo 8 years later. I would suspect that FSF/Letouzey would be quite capable of achieving the desired contact.
Rebel wrote:And when that happens the CC division of the ICGA will be in big trouble.
I am not sure what this "CC division of the ICGA" is? In 2002 the ICCA became the ICGA, and since then has tolerated computer chess having a special role, due to its history with the organisation. But there's no reason for the ICGA to retain this priviliged place for computer chess, other than the necessity of organising the WCCC under Section 1 of Article II of the by-laws. [For that matter, 2002 would have been a logical time for the ICGA to de-affiliate with FIDE, given the broader focus].
Rebel wrote:n a normal world we would fire such as man,
I'm not sure how one would "fire" the president of an assocation, usually you would oust such a person by a vote (eg, Cock de Gorter with the CSVN).
Chris Whittington wrote:You can vote for me!
Section 3 of Article II states:
All candidates for election must have been members of the ICGA for no less than two (2) years, and I should think that would mean continuously up to the time of the election.
Chris Whittington wrote:c. make a complete review of the icga-Rybka case
You must mean the Fruit/Rybka case (or Letouzey/Rajlich), as the "Rybka v ICGA" case was something heard by the FIDE Ethics Commission, and I'm not sure how/why the ICGA would review this.
Rebel wrote:Don't try to make Fruit the mother of all chess engines, it for 90% relies on the work, ideas, publication of others.
The reason why Fruit keeps coming up is that it was the "mother" of
Rybka, in the sense of eval. I guess one could say that it was nice of Letouzey to "collate" some segment of computer chess knowledge (use this, don't use that), for Rajlich to re-use.
Chris Whittington wrote:Maybe there is a bit of divergence as search has developed over time, but basically all searches are semantically the same, probably in the same order as well.
Chris Whittington wrote:if they did that for search (weights like R=2 etc) they (all programs) would be almost completely identical.
This is complete nonsense. One could compare Stockfish to IvanHoe (for instance), and see the difference. The pruning conditions can differ, the null move conditions (static threat detection), the extension conditions (singular moves, passed pawns, checks), the LMR conditions (history, refutation), how exclusion search is used in determining singularity, qsearch use of hash, ... The order in which one does various prunings/reductions is also variable. There are other methods, such as prob-cut, which haven't caught on, but appear in some engines. Even Rybka and the IPPOLIT had a number of differing search peculiarities, though I'd call them in the same class. Not to mention the implementation details, of splitting functions into pv-search, near-root-search, mid-depth search, low-depth search, qsearch, pv-qsearch, exclusion search, ... or keeping it simple with just search/qsearch and usng
if statements.
Rebel wrote:Mark is no longer interested
Hmm, I told you I was going to be busy, and I did other things on the weekend. Looking at another 50+ posts in the other thread, now I know why people tend to hate Mondays.