Hi Darren,

After white (mogo) H2, MoGo was estimating 74%, and expecting:
H2 G1 H3 B1 A1 B3 H1 F8 B5 H4

Then black played H3, and estimation increased to 81%, white B3 and expecting:
B3 B1 A1 B4 C5 C4 A3 C6 B6 B5

Actually during pondering MoGo realized that it was lost then, because
black played the expected move (B1), but the estimation was then <
50%.
So with more time (few time was left at this point) it would have
realized earlier.

However I wonder where was the mistake: H2, B3 or much before, i.e.
already before H2 white was dead?

I am sorry, if it is trivial mistake and the position is obvious :-/
Sylvain

2007/6/14, Darren Cook <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Thank you for your analysis. Did you looked at the first game
> Steenvreeter-MoGo (MoGo was white)?
> I wonder, because MoGo was really happy, estimation always increased, up to
> 81%, then in one move dropped to less 50%, and MoGo eventually lost. I
> wonder if MoGo did a blunder, or simply that it evaluated badly the
> position for some reason.

Hi Sylvain,
Could you post (to the list) what move number the drop happened at?
It'll be interesting to see if whatever Steenvreeter did at that point
was a surprising move to a human expert as well.



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