I just wanted to add, that the result of the match can not be considered as being an overwhelming victory for the chess engine. Is there a reference to his playing weakly throughout the match? Bubba73 (talk), 15:13, 19 December 2006 (UTC) That was a surprizingly bad move, but otherwise he didn't play weakly, as far as I can tell. A link was given to his bad blunder in one game. The article says "Kramnik played surprisingly weak". Preceding unsigned comment added by 59.92.195.202 ( talk) 11:36, 1 September 2009 (UTC) Kramnik played weakly? I am not sure about the release date though. The latest version for Deep Fritz needs to be updated to 11.
Fritz & Chesster isn't even close to being notable it deserves a single line in the Fritz entry at best. X3D Fritz is just another version of Fritz with some eye candy that got added to Fritz later. They should be merged.- JStripes 22:19, 11 March 2007 (UTC) Will let X3D Fritz simmer, maybe merging to new article as suggested. I'm not so sure about Fritz & Chesster, since it is mainly a completely different program.
ModelCitizen: could you please post the full set of moves for that Fruit-Fritz game that you posted an image of? (The game seems quite strange) Johnleemk | Talk 09:51, 18 December 2005 (UTC) strange moves in the game shown in the image
The buttons below the windows (“N”, “A-Z”, “Result”, “Date”, …) should be working in both directions like Explorer in Windows: 1 click on the button (A à Z) sorts alphabetically while a second click is the revert order (Z à A). It can not be very difficult today to increase the resolution and to enlarge the pop-up window so you don't need the scrollbar. I still don't like that the 3-part-window of "player statistics" see picture below is still very small.
I wonder why they put the search-window for the name below (would've been better at the top) but ok it works. The tab "players" in the database-window is the place to be when you want to prepare for an opponent. But again this more sounds like statistical chess. It could give you an extra incentive to study rookendgames or also that you will exchange the queens and lighter pieces quicker. Be careful as only endgames with pieces are shown and no pawn-endgames (because of double counting). The figure right shows the same search after 6.f4 in the Sicilian Dragon: so mainly rook-endgames. That can be useful to know which endgames can occur in an opening. Left-below you see the probabilities of the different type of endgames B vs N, N vs N or R vs R. After the 11 moves of the game Belkadi – O’Kelly I checked which endgames occur in a standard-position of the Caro-Kann.