His thesis was titled All the Right Moves[1] and described a VLSI architecture for computing complex chess evaluation functions quickly, as used in HiTech.
Carl Ebeling (now at University of Washington) built the special purpose hardware (Ebeling 1985), and a good deal of software relating to how to interface to the hardware and see what it is doing for debugging purposes.
Carl Ebeling, Andrew James Palay (1984). The Design and Implementation of a VLSI Chess Move Generator. Proceedings of the 11th Annual International Symposium on Computer Architecture. IEEE and ACM.
an American computer scientist, electrical engineer, and professor at the Department of Computer Science & Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle. As former Ph.D. student at Carnegie Mellon University, Carl Ebeling member of the HiTech team around Hans Berliner.
His thesis was titled All the Right Moves [1] and described a VLSI architecture for computing complex chess evaluation functions quickly, as used in HiTech.
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Hans Berliner on Ebeling's role in the HiTech team (1988) [4] :Selected Publications
[5] [6]1984 ...
Revised as Hans Berliner, Carl Ebeling (1990). Hitech. Computers, Chess, and Cognition, pp. 79-109
1990 ...
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