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Andy Thomason
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* Andy Thomason
Andy Thomason
,
a British physicist, electronics engineer, mathematician, lecturer at Department of Computing,
Goldsmiths, University of London
, teaching game programming at postgraduate level
[1]
, and fifty-fifty
senior programmer
at
SN Systems
,
Sony Computer Entertainment's
console tools specialist, and before at
Psygnosis
and Rage Games, where he was involved in developing of the
Flight simulator
B-17 Flying Fortress: The Mighty 8th
[2]
. He holds a B.Sc. in Physics and Electronics from the
University of Manchester
, and an M.Sc. in Mathematics from the
Open University
, and is a games industry veteran from his involvement in computer chess and console games in the 1970s until the present
[3]
. Andy Thomason is author of the chess program
Killer Chess
(K. Chess), which participated at the
First World Microcomputer Chess Championship
1980 in
London
[4]
[5]
.
Andy Thomason
[6]
Table of Contents
Selected Publications
Lecture Notes
External Links
References
What links here?
Selected Publications
Andy Thomason
(
2005
).
Faster Quaternion Interpolation Using Approximations
. in
Kim Pallister
(editor)
Game Programming Gems 5
. pp 247–267,
Charles River Media
, ISBN 1-58450-352-1
[7]
Lecture Notes
Andy Thomason - game programming lecture notes
External Links
Andy Thomason - United Kingdom | LinkedIn
Thomason, Andy, Goldsmiths, University of London
Andy Thomason's projects and lecture notes
Gamasutra - Features - Day in the Life: Andy Thomason, Games Technology Researcher and Writer
The International Consumer Electronics Games Innovations Conference
by
Andy Thomason
Andy Thomason. Professor Computing Goldsmiths University of London | Game and Technologies Universities World Congress
#AltDevBlogADay » Andy Thomason
Key academic staff, Goldsmiths, University of London
Andrew Thomason's ICGA Tournaments
References
^
#AltDevBlogADay » Andy Thomason
^
Andy Thomason - United Kingdom | LinkedIn
^
Key academic staff, Goldsmiths, University of London
^
Tom Fürstenberg
(
1980
).
The First World Microcomputer Championship
.
Chess
,
December 1980
mentions Killer Chess
^
Kevin O’Connell
(
1980
).
World Microcomputer Chess Championship
.
Personal Computer World
,
November 1980
mentions K. Chess
^
Key academic staff, Goldsmiths, University of London
^
Quaternion from Wikipedia
What links here?
Page
Date Edited
Andy Thomason
Jul 22, 2012
GPU
Dec 16, 2017
Killer Chess
Jan 8, 2016
People
Feb 28, 2018
Programming
Dec 16, 2017
SIMD and SWAR Techniques
Jun 27, 2017
University of Manchester
May 24, 2017
WMCCC 1980
Dec 25, 2017
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a British physicist, electronics engineer, mathematician, lecturer at Department of Computing, Goldsmiths, University of London, teaching game programming at postgraduate level [1], and fifty-fifty senior programmer at SN Systems, Sony Computer Entertainment's console tools specialist, and before at Psygnosis and Rage Games, where he was involved in developing of the Flight simulator B-17 Flying Fortress: The Mighty 8th [2]. He holds a B.Sc. in Physics and Electronics from the University of Manchester, and an M.Sc. in Mathematics from the Open University, and is a games industry veteran from his involvement in computer chess and console games in the 1970s until the present [3]. Andy Thomason is author of the chess program Killer Chess (K. Chess), which participated at the First World Microcomputer Chess Championship 1980 in London [4] [5].
Table of Contents
Selected Publications
Lecture Notes
External Links
References
What links here?
Up one level