The Chess Master and the Computer

In his book Chess Metaphors, Diego Rasskin-Gutman points out that a player looking eight moves ahead is already presented with as many possible games as there are stars in the galaxy. Another staple, a variation of which is also used by Rasskin-Gutman, is to say there are more possible chess games than the number of atoms in the universe.

The heavy use of computer analysis has pushed the game itself in new directions. The machine doesn’t care about style or patterns or hundreds of years of established theory. It counts up the values of the chess pieces, analyzes a few billion moves, and counts them up again. (A computer translates each piece and each positional factor into a value in order to reduce the game to numbers it can crunch.) It is entirely free of prejudice and doctrine and this has contributed to the development of players who are almost as free of dogma as the machines with which they train. Increasingly, a move isn’t good or bad because it looks that way or because it hasn’t been done that way before. It’s simply good if it works and bad if it doesn’t. Although we still require a strong measure of intuition and logic to play well, humans today are starting to play more like computers.

Having a computer partner also meant never having to worry about making a tactical blunder. The computer could project the consequences of each move we considered, pointing out possible outcomes and countermoves we might otherwise have missed. With that taken care of for us, we could concentrate on strategic planning instead of spending so much time on calculations. Human creativity was even more paramount under these conditions.

This is our last chess metaphor, then—a metaphor for how we have discarded innovation and creativity in exchange for a steady supply of marketable products.

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Tonight (1.28.10) in NYC @ LOUIS V ESP

Mirror-Window

Model Home will be showing as part of the Mirror/Window show at Louis V ESP in NYC, curated by Preeti Sodhi and James Woodward.

w00t

R. H. Quaytman @ ICA

Really into these prints, wish I could go out there and check it out.

24-RHQuaytman_Ch15_TightBW_ArrowScreenEdge_25x40

26-RHQuaytman_Ch15_DiagonalPink_2009_32x52in

via Contemporary Art Daily

The World as Archive


…it is not a high tech device for producing perfect images, but might rather be described as a means of outsourcing memory.

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Smoke Fail

I was trying to make some preset smoke in motion, but didn’t have the right preset textures.

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