Mephisto Rebell
Home
*
Engines
*
Mephisto
* Rebell
Mephisto Rebell 5.0
,
a
dedicated chess computer
module
for
Mephisto module systems
by
Hegener & Glaser
launched in 1986 short after
Rebel's
strong
WCCC 1986
in
Cologne
.
Ed Schröder's
first dedicated computer program ran on a
65C02
CMOS
processor. It was superseded during the following years by
Mephisto MM IV
,
Mephisto MM V
and various other models and modules, such as the
Mephisto Polgar
all with the approved 8-bit technology.
Mephisto Rebell 5.0
[1]
Table of Contents
See also
External Links
References
What links here?
See also
Mephisto MM IV
Mephisto MM V
Mephisto Polgar
Mephisto RISC
Rebel
External Links
Rebell 5.0
from
Rebel Pure Nostalgica
by
Ed Schröder
Dedicated chess computers - Home of the Dutch Rebel
by
Ed Schröder
Back to the 80's with UCI
by
Ed Schröder
»
UCI
Rebel's ICGA Tournaments
Mephisto Rebell 5.0
from
Schachcomputer.info Wiki
(German)
Mephisto MM IV
Mephisto MM V
Mephisto Monte Carlo IV
References
^
Rebell 5.0
from
Rebel Pure Nostalgica
by
Ed Schröder
What links here?
Page
Date Edited
Aegon 1988
Jan 22, 2017
Ed Schroder
Feb 26, 2018
Engines
Mar 10, 2018
Hegener & Glaser
Dec 18, 2017
Jeroen Noomen
Jul 21, 2017
Kasparov simul vs 32 micro Hamburg 1985
Dec 22, 2017
Mephisto
Dec 18, 2017
Mephisto MM IV
Sep 1, 2017
Mephisto MM V
Sep 1, 2017
Mephisto Module Systems
Sep 7, 2017
Mephisto Polgar
Sep 1, 2017
Mephisto Rebell
Sep 1, 2017
Netherlands-vs-Computers-1989
Mar 10, 2017
Rebel
Feb 25, 2018
Revelation
Jul 15, 2016
Revelation II
Jan 8, 2018
USOCCC 1986
Dec 1, 2017
WCCC 1986
Jul 27, 2017
Up one level
Contributions to https://chessprogramming.wikispaces.com/ are licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike 3.0 License
.
Portions not contributed by visitors are Copyright 2018 Tangient LLC
TES: The largest network of teachers in the world
Turn off "Getting Started"
Home
...
Loading...
a dedicated chess computer module for Mephisto module systems by Hegener & Glaser launched in 1986 short after Rebel's strong WCCC 1986 in Cologne. Ed Schröder's first dedicated computer program ran on a 65C02 CMOS processor. It was superseded during the following years by Mephisto MM IV, Mephisto MM V and various other models and modules, such as the Mephisto Polgar all with the approved 8-bit technology.
Table of Contents
See also
External Links
Mephisto MM IV
Mephisto MM V
Mephisto Monte Carlo IV
References
What links here?
Up one level