Peter+Auge

a German toy manufacturer, distributor and entrepreneur. As founder of Novag Industries Ltd., Peter Auge was manufacturer of dedicated chess computers from 1978 until 2009 when Novag was sold to //Solar Wide Industrial Ltd.//, which continued manufacturing Novag chess computers. || toc =Photos=
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 * [[image:PeterAuge.JPG width="155" height="211"]] ||~  || **Peter W. Auge**,
 * Peter Auge ||~  ||^   ||
 * [[image:FriedelAuge1986.JPG width="533" height="398"]] ||
 * Frederic Friedel and Peter Auge at [|Nuremberg International Toy Fair], 1986 ||

=Sugar Pellet Toys= The Auge family were toy makers from [|Nuremburg], [|Germany]. Peter Auge emigrated and set up a toy distribution business in [|Montreal], [|Canada], and eventually drawn to [|Hong Kong], which developed as the international toy manufacturing center after [|World War II], to conduct his toy business in 1964. Auge implemented his "hot idea" to market plastic toy tools filled with sugar pellets. Auge started a factory and within three months he employed 500 girls doing nothing but filling these plastic toys with sugar pellets, and Auge shipped 55 million pieces to the US.

=Chess Computers= Whether his company was already called Novag is a bit unclear, an article in the German magazine [|Der Spiegel] mentions, that similar to Sidney Samole's Fidelity Electronics, which evolved from manufacturing hearing-aid and other high-tech, bio-medical products to chess computers, Auge's firm converted from plastic toy business to computer chess manufacturing. However in late 1977 or early 1978, after first dedicated computers appeared in the United States, Peter Auge, an ample chess fan, became interested in the idea of developing his own chess computer, and collaborated with the Swiss technologist Eric Winkler, who had done electronics research for a trading company in Hong Kong, to realize the idea, and to set up Novag Industries Ltd.

Chess Champion MK I
The story about the origins of Novag's first chess computer, the Chess Champion MK I released in September 1978, is quite venturesome. The software was an exact copy of the ROM of the 1977 //Data Cash Systems Inc.// CompuChess program, which was developed by David B. Goodrich & Associates, while other sources claim David Levy was involved in the development. While Winkler was responsible for hardware, it was Auge who was "responsible" for the software.

Kittinger
After Eric Winkler left Novag for SciSys in 1979, Peter Auge continued with Novag and soon started the long term collaboration with David Kittinger, consolidating Novag's image with models like the Savant, Robot Adversary and most notably the Super Constellation. Peter Auge's conservative marketing with the focus on human entertainment rather than challenging other programs was with hindsight quite successful, since Novag survived most of his competitors with apparently stronger programs.

=Associated People=
 * [|Florencio Campomanes]
 * Paul Cohen
 * Peter Jennings
 * Mike Johnson
 * [|Anatoly Karpov]
 * [|Alfred Kinzel]
 * David Kittinger
 * David Levy
 * Joseph Sugarman
 * Eric Winkler

=Publications=
 * [|Schachcomputer: Lästig, nicht lustig], [|Der Spiegel] 49/1982, December 06, 1982, (German) [|pdf]
 * Tony Harrington (**1983**). //Inter~Galactic Moves//. Personal Computer World, [|October 1983]
 * [|Interview with Peter Auge] (pdf), Erwerbsquelle: 10-1985, Zeitschrift Schachcomputer (Herausgeber Florian Piel) hosted by Hein Veldhuis (German)
 * [|100,000 Chess Computers a year Peter Auge says his HK product can only be beaten by masters and grand masters], The Bulletin, May 1986, pdf hosted by [|Chess Computer UK]

=External Links= > media type="youtube" key="AIvNdvAzJpU"
 * [|SciSys and Novag : The Early Years] from [|Chess Computer UK] by Mike Watters
 * [|Thomas Nitsche Mephisto III] by Thorsten Czub covers Computerschach und Spiele 2/85 gloss about a meeting of Peter Auge and Thomas Nitsche
 * [|David Kittinger - Interview] by Bryan Whitby
 * Made in Hong Kong - Kein Leben ist perfekt - Doku über Peter Auge, Gründer der NOVAG Industries Ltd. (German 1980), [|YouTube] Video

=References= =What links here?= include page="Peter Auge" component="backlinks" limit="30"
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