Michael Hoffmann,
a German computer scientist, programmer, league chess player (around 2000) [1][2][3], and as computer chess programmer working on his engine Nemo. Supported by Sven Schüle, Nemo 1.0 Beta was released to the public in January 2012 [4], available from Jim Ablett's site, also hosted by Ron Murawski[5].
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Michael Hoffmann,
a German computer scientist, programmer, league chess player (around 2000) [1] [2] [3], and as computer chess programmer working on his engine Nemo. Supported by Sven Schüle, Nemo 1.0 Beta was released to the public in January 2012 [4], available from Jim Ablett's site, also hosted by Ron Murawski [5].
Obstruction Difference
In 2009, Michael Hoffmann proposed an interesting technique to generate sliding piece attacks with bitboards, dubbed Obstruction Difference [6].Forum Posts
References
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