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To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (67690)7/14/1999 7:13:00 PM
From: Sam Sara  Respond to of 164684
 
Thanks for the explanation. EOM



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (67690)7/15/1999 9:10:00 AM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 164684
 
Kasparov surprised in Internet chess contest
By Grant McCool
NEW YORK, July 14 (Reuters) - World chess champion Garry
Kasparov has been hit by a novel move that has quickly created
a double-edged, dynamic position in the game he started last
month against all comers on the Internet.
Computer users playing in the "Kasparov vs. The World" game
on Microsoft Corp.'s <MSFT.O> www.msn.com Web site voted for an
unusual queen move on their 10th turn with the black pieces in
a variation of the Sicilian Defense.
The move set the stage for a sequence in which both sides
will capture material but leave an unpredictable outcome.
"It's a brand new idea," Russian grandmaster Kasparov said
by telephone on Wednesday from his summer vacation and chess
training camp in Croatia. "It doesn't promise me a lot but it
puts some pressure on black. It's a very unusual position, a
broken balance."
The match moderator, English grandmaster Daniel King,
described the contest as "a genius vs a committee." Kasparov,
36, is considered the strongest player in the history of the
ancient game.
On the 12th move on Wednesday, Kasparov has black's king in
check with a knight and is poised to capture black's queenside
rook once his opponents move the king. In exchange, black is
likely to capture a second of Kasparov's pawns and the knight.
Although black's pawn captures will restore the material
balance, The World team's king could be vulnerable because it
is stuck in the center of the board, while Kasparov has castled
on his kingside.
Chess players from all over the world have been logging on
to Microsoft's gaming Web site, www.zone.com, since June 21 to
discuss moves with a team of young experts from the United
States, France and Germany, who in turn provide analysis and
advise the public on which move to vote for. Each side makes a
move every 24 hours according to a schedule that allows for
time differences across the globe.
Microsoft said its internal tracking showed the site
averaging 250,000 users per day, with an average of 10,000
voting per day on moves.
"Some people are taking it very seriously on the chat
sessions I host on the site," King said from his home in
London. "It's a brilliant way of learning, just trying to
predict Kasparov's moves."
The rules allow for the world champion, the experts and
playing public to use chess computer software programs in their
decision-making. Kasparov played two historic matches against
IBM supercomputer Deep Blue in 1996 and 1997, winning the first
in Philadelphia and losing the second in New York.
In this match he has made his moves via electronic mail
while traveling in the United States and Europe. Kasparov said
he was pleased the The World team had selected the
unpredictable sequence.
"It makes the game very exciting," said Kasparov, who
agreed to the contest as an experiment to test and gauge the
popularity of interactive chess on the Internet.

REUTERS
Rtr 16:18 07-14-99