I played four more games of Chess between my two computers today, and the results were more inconclusive. With 2 seconds of thinking time, each played White once, and White won both games. With 3 seconds of thinking time, my new computer won as Black, but the game was a draw when it played White. These results give a slight edge to the new computer, but the results were closer than yesterday. It's probably thanks to the collapse of Moore's Law that the CPU cores in my new computer are not leaps and bounds better than the ones I got 12 years ago. This is why CPUs started to increase in number of cores instead of in clock speed.
I played four more games of Chess between my two computers today, and the results were more inconclusive. With 2 seconds of thinking time, each played White once, and White won both games. With 3 seconds of thinking time, my new computer won as Black, but the game was a draw when it played White. These results give a slight edge to the new computer, but the results were closer than yesterday. It's probably thanks to the collapse of Moore's Law that the CPU cores in my new computer are not leaps and bounds better than the ones I got 12 years ago. This is why CPUs started to increase in number of cores instead of in clock speed.