When Sid Samole was ready to retire, he sold Fidelity. And he sold it to a German chess manufacturer who had, at the time, the then world champion program. Our program had slipped into second place and so ... And that company had bought Fidelity and so we're saying, well, they've got the world champion program and we're number two. What's our future? They're a German company and we're in California, you know, where are things going? And, at the same time, we were approached by... Eric Winkler.
And he asked us if we would come to work for him and create a chess program for him. And we did work for three years for Saitek and Eric Winkler had a dream of creating a chess program using the Sparc processor, a risc-based processor. And we did do that. We created it. We got Sparc workstations and we coded an entire chess engine in Sparc Assembly language.
Well, Saitek hoped to win a world championship and recapture the Royal Championship title and we took a program that almost won. We came very close to winning but... Yeah. We lost the final round... And did not win and so, at that point in time, Saitek said, "Oh, well, that was a good try. Good bye."
a chess computer module by Saitek, with a SPARC processor, and a program by Kathe and Dan Spracklen, dedicated for the SciSys/Saitek module system Saitek Renaissance. A first version of the program played the WMCCC 1991 in Vancouver as Saitek-X, 5th with 4½/7. The loss versus Ed Schröder's ChessMachine Gideon at the WCCC 1992 in Madrid almost ended their involvement in computer chess when they didn't win that world title. Despite, Kasparov Sparc participated a last time at the WMCCC 1993 in Munich operated by Günter Niggemann. Unfortunately, Sparc suffered from hardware problems and finally a broken interface card in the last round [1] .
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by Kathe and Dan Spracklen, excerpt from their Oral History [3] :Well, Saitek hoped to win a world championship and recapture the Royal Championship title and we took a program that almost won. We came very close to winning but... Yeah. We lost the final round... And did not win and so, at that point in time, Saitek said, "Oh, well, that was a good try. Good bye."
The Game
WCCC 1992, round 5, Kasparov Sparc - ChessMachine WK [4]See also
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