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What Is The Future For The Game Of Chess

By: John Skelly

In recent years, most of the public attention which was formerly focused on chess games between grandmasters has turned to computer vs. computer chess tournaments. The interest of fans in computer vs. grandmaster games have dramatically dwindled in the wake of consecutive losses that human grandmasters have had to concede to bot chess players.

Most recently, Vladimir Kramnik was defeated by computer super player Fritz v 1.0. It is now apparent that these competitions are useless because computers have a more complete grasp of the possible moves that can be made any time in a chess game. For this purpose, the new machines have been built with enormous storage capacities and speeds which enable them to choose one out of millions of possible moves to make.

Because chess is not a game of chance, it is especially suitable for computers to play chess games. Computers are not subject to slips in logic since their algorithms are determined by their program. Neither are computers subject to fatigue and exhaustion or any other emotional distraction. Humans have learned to concede to the fact that for winning a game of chess, a well programmed and fast robot does a better work than the best human grandmasters.

Not content with their victories, creators of chess-playing machines plan to make programs that will exhaust all the possible moves for chess games, in this way to make the perfect chess-playing machine. At the rate technology is progressing, this is not a far-off possibility.

In fact, even humans are now interested in studying the way machines go about deciding on the proper moves to make in their game. Study is being devoted to the techniques of machines in playing chess, in this way to expand our own awareness of the games possibilities.

However, the future of chess for humans is by far not dim. In fact, the development of chess-playing machines may lead to better techniques for playing the game. The only change in the status of the game for humans is that for human beings, chess has become less a game to win than a game to learn from.

The possible educational benefits of playing chess has been reinforced by independent studies conducted all around the globe. All are unanimous in proclaiming that children who play chess have a mental and psychological edge over those who don't.

For instance, playing chess improves the apprehension of the significance of distances in logic. The accessibility of things determines their importance for certain objectives. This is also plainly referred to as 'common sense', a facility for which not all people have.

Administrative skills are also enhanced by chess games because chess players need to coordinate the movement of all their pieces on the board to win the game. Reasoning with accurate logic is another good thing that a chess player can possess.

The future understanding we have of chess lies in computers to achieve, the future benefits of chess are meant for humans to reap by playing the game, not only to win but more so to learn and grow.

Article Source: http://www.avidarticles.com

John Skelly is an avid chess player and loves to not only play the game but talk about it with others. He particularly enjoys writing about the intricacies and dynamics of chess. He invites everyone to find out more about Quality-Chess.net and to play chess as often as they can.

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