Chris Whittington,
a British computer chess and games programmer, publisher and entrepreneur, author of several commercial computer chess programs including Chess System Tal published through his own company Oxford Softworks. He is famous for his computer chess paradigms as an appeal for knowledge based programs [1][2]. In May 2000, when Oxford Softworks was sold to a venture capitalist consortium, Chris retired from games programming.
Chris Whittington was and is critic of the arguments that Rybka is a derivate of Fruit since Zach Wegner published his first conclusion on the Rybka/Fruit: evaluation in June 2010 [3][4], and consequently critic of the ICGAdecision in 2011. During the Investigation process, he was rejected to become member of the panel[5].
a British computer chess and games programmer, publisher and entrepreneur, author of several commercial computer chess programs including Chess System Tal published through his own company Oxford Softworks. He is famous for his computer chess paradigms as an appeal for knowledge based programs [1] [2]. In May 2000, when Oxford Softworks was sold to a venture capitalist consortium, Chris retired from games programming.
Chris Whittington was and is critic of the arguments that Rybka is a derivate of Fruit since Zach Wegner published his first conclusion on the Rybka/Fruit: evaluation in June 2010 [3] [4], and consequently critic of the ICGA decision in 2011. During the Investigation process, he was rejected to become member of the panel [5].
Table of Contents
Photos
Chess Engines
See also
Forum Posts
Rybka Controversy
Minority Reports
External Links
Airbase Invader - World of Spectrum
References
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