Hi Ed, nice to hear that the checkers community is interested in competing in the 10x10 arena! I guess now that checkers is almost solved that `moving up a weight class' (no disrespect, there is always 12x12 canadian draughts!) is the logical next thing.Ed Gilbert wrote:Hi Bert,
Where did you hear the news about Schaeffer finishing his solutions? I have not seen it yet.
I have been building endgame databases for 10x10 draughts since last year. I have completed all the 2 through 7 piece positions with up to 5 pieces on a side, and I have also built some partial 8-piece and 9-piece subsets. By partial, I mean that I start building slices that are mostly men without having the more king-heavy slices that some of the positions depend on. By skipping the king-heavy slices you can build the most useful ones in much less time. Of course there are some positions that cannot be resolved this way, but it turns out that a very high percentage can be. I have finished all the 4x4 and 5x3 positions with up to one king on each side, and in a day or two I will be done with the 5x4 all checkers slice. I'm not at home at the moment, but if I can remember the sizes correctly, the 2 - 7 pieces is about 30gb, the 8-piece slices are 85gb, and the 9 piece slice is about 11gb. These were all built using 4 rather slow machines that I built in 2004. They could be replaced by one fast dual-core machine.
-- Ed (author of Kingsrow)
Will you also make the 7 & 8 piece databases available to the public, like you do with the 10 piece checkers databases?