Home * Tournaments * First Soviet Computer-Chess Championship 1988
The First Soviet Computer-Chess Championship 1988 was held in Ulan-Ude, the capital of the Buryat Republic, June 27-29, 1988, as part of the Ulan-Ude Computer Festival Informatics, Peace, Communication and Ecology. The tournament was directed by Alexander Bitman with assistance of Mikhail Donskoy and ICCA observer Jonathan Schaeffer.
After the tournament, the directors, participants, and other interested parties held a meeting to found the Soviet Computer-Chess Federation, the Chess-Programming Association (CPA) of the USSR with the goal to support computer chess and chess programming, to organize computer chess tournaments, and to establish a cooperative for producing chess computers. Alexander Timofeev (Institute for Physical Culture, Sport) became its president, further executive members were A.S. Morozov (NICEVENT, Industry, member of the Strategist team) and Mikhail Donskoy (Institute for System Studies, Science).
Six programs and computers participated, three of them variants of the Strategist program. There were four notable absentees. Not present were Kaissa (retired), Pioneer (too many bugs?), Butenko's program (he required a mainframe) and V. Petrenko's program Elektronika IM-01 (travel problems). Centaur by Victor Vikhrev won with 4/5, and had two identical games versus Strategist-1 and Strategist which ended in a draw [1].
Table of Contents
Final Standing
Games
Round 4, Algir - CentaurChess-Programming Association
After the tournament, the directors, participants, and other interested parties held a meeting to found the Soviet Computer-Chess Federation, the Chess-Programming Association (CPA) of the USSR with the goal to support computer chess and chess programming, to organize computer chess tournaments, and to establish a cooperative for producing chess computers. Alexander Timofeev (Institute for Physical Culture, Sport) became its president, further executive members were A.S. Morozov (NICEVENT, Industry, member of the Strategist team) and Mikhail Donskoy (Institute for System Studies, Science).See also
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