Enter Your Reply The Comment You're Replying To George Duke wrote on Tue, Oct 7, 2008 11:24 PM UTC:Okay, we are getting wonderfully healthful differentiation of topics for once, sharpening critical thinking. World Championship 8x8. Is 8x8 small? Yes, awkwardly small. Think of the divergence from the common ancestor the 1-2 millenniums back. Xiangqi enlarged the board from Asian peninsular Chaturanga. Shogi enlarged the board. Travelling west, Shatranj stayed the same with small 8x8, and OrthoChess followed suit during its lifetime years 1500-2000 keeping small 8x8. Computers appeared in 18th century minds like Wolfgang von Kempelen's in development of automaton the Turk -- the idea of machine playing Chess, the quintessential human endeavor. Computer theory began in 19th century with Babbage's Universal Analytical Engine. By early 21st century, selected Computers (TogaII, Rybka) are de facto world champion on small 8x8. Still smaller 6x6 Los Alamos had been mastered earlier. So, board size must be important factor trying keeping computer at bay. Human championships being ballyhooed of computer-mastered OrthoChess 8x8, like this month's Anand-Kramnik at Bonn, will inevitably progressively receive diminishing stature, eventually of no especial note. High time for reform, revolution, or revelation: mere contemplative revelation that small 8x8 never really was suitable for any complete Chess anyway. Although OrthoChess will not quite go the way of Checkers, or lowly Tic-Tac-Toe, let us ease its passage from paramount contest of skill and challenge to cultural artifact and relic -- gone the way of Shatranj, fondly remembered and oh-so passe. Edit Form You may not post a new comment, because ItemID Anand_Kramnik does not match any item.