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Anatoly Uskov
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* Anatoly Uskov
Anatoly V. Uskov
,
a Russian computer scientist. In
1963
[1]
at
Alexander Kronrod’s
laboratory at the Moscow
Institute of Theoretical and Experimental Physics
(
ITEP
), Anatoly Uskov co-developed the
ITEP Chess Program
, together with
Georgy Adelson-Velsky
,
Vladimir Arlazarov
and
Alexander Zhivotovsky
, advised by Russian chess master
Alexander Bitman
and three-time world champion
Mikhail Botvinnik
.
At the end of 1966 a
four game match
began between the
Kotok-McCarthy-Program
, running on a
IBM 7090
computer, and the
ITEP Chess Program
on a Soviet
M-2
computer
[2]
. The match played over nine months was won 3-1 by the The
ITEP
program, despite playing on slower hardware. By 1971,
Mikhail V. Donskoy
joined with Arlazarov and Uskov to program its successor on an
ICL System 4/70
at the
Institute of Control Sciences
, called
Kaissa
, which became the first
World Computer Chess Champion
in
1974 in Stockholm
.
Arlazarov
, Uskov, and
Donskoy
[3]
[4]
Table of Contents
Selected Publications
Forum Posts
External Links
References
What links here?
Selected Publications
[5]
Georgy Adelson-Velsky
,
Vladimir Arlazarov
,
Alexander Bitman
,
Alexander Zhivotovsky
,
Anatoly Uskov
(
1970
).
Programming a Computer to Play Chess
.
Russian Mathematical Surveys, Vol. 25
, pp. 221-262.
Vladimir Arlazarov
,
I. I. Zujev
,
Anatoly Uskov
,
I. A. Faradzhev
(
1974
).
An algorithm for the reduction of finite non-oriented graphs to canonical form
.
U.S.S.R. Computational Mathematics and Mathematical Physics
, No. 14
A. G. Alexandrov
,
Vladimir Arlazarov
,
A. M. Baraev
,
Ya. Yu. Gol'fand
,
V. N. Deza
,
T. P. Il’ina
,
Edward Komissarchik
,
Anatoly Uskov
,
I. A. Faradzhev
,
Aaron L. Futer
(
1977
).
Processing of large files of information on the example of the analysis of the rook’s end game
.
Programming and Computer Software
, No. 3
Forum Posts
Early Reference on Bit-Boards
by
Tony Warnock
,
rgc
, October 29, 1994
External Links
Anatoly Uskov's ICGA Tournaments
References
^
"Каисса" - Историю программы рассказывает один из ее создателей Михаил Донской
-
Kaissa
by
Mikhail Donskoy
, translated by
Google Translate
^
The Fast Universal Digital Computer M-2
by the
Russian Virtual Computer Museum
^
Tony Marsland
,
Monty Newborn
(
1981
).
A brighter future for Soviet computer chess?
ICCA Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 1
,
pdf
^
Arlazarov, Uskov, and Donskoy in Moscow 1980
, Gift of
Monroe Newborn
from
The Computer History Museum
^
zbMATH Uskov, A.V.
What links here?
Page
Date Edited
Aaron L. Futer
Dec 23, 2014
Alexander Bitman
Jun 2, 2015
Alexander Zhivotovsky
Sep 10, 2013
Anatoly Uskov
Jan 7, 2016
Bitboards
Nov 14, 2017
Chess
Jan 21, 2018
David Levy
Jan 3, 2017
Edward Komissarchik
May 20, 2016
Efficient Generation of Sliding Piece Attacks
Nov 5, 2016
Endgame Tablebases
Mar 6, 2018
Evaluation Overlap
Jul 19, 2016
Georgy Adelson-Velsky
Apr 9, 2018
Institute of Control Sciences
Jun 2, 2015
Institute of Theoretical and Experimental Physics
Sep 8, 2015
ITEP Chess Program
Apr 2, 2014
Kaissa
Apr 9, 2018
M-2
Sep 10, 2013
M-20
Oct 9, 2013
Mikhail Donskoy
Dec 23, 2017
People
Feb 28, 2018
Stanford-ITEP Match
Apr 9, 2018
Vladimir Arlazarov
May 20, 2016
WCCC 1974
Jan 19, 2018
WCCC 1977
Dec 22, 2017
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a Russian computer scientist. In 1963 [1] at Alexander Kronrod’s laboratory at the Moscow Institute of Theoretical and Experimental Physics (ITEP), Anatoly Uskov co-developed the ITEP Chess Program, together with Georgy Adelson-Velsky, Vladimir Arlazarov and Alexander Zhivotovsky, advised by Russian chess master Alexander Bitman and three-time world champion Mikhail Botvinnik.
At the end of 1966 a four game match began between the Kotok-McCarthy-Program, running on a IBM 7090 computer, and the ITEP Chess Program on a Soviet M-2 computer [2]. The match played over nine months was won 3-1 by the The ITEP program, despite playing on slower hardware. By 1971, Mikhail V. Donskoy joined with Arlazarov and Uskov to program its successor on an ICL System 4/70 at the Institute of Control Sciences, called Kaissa, which became the first World Computer Chess Champion in 1974 in Stockholm.
Table of Contents
Selected Publications
[5]Forum Posts
External Links
References
What links here?
Up one level