Novag's first chess computer, the Chess Champion MK I appeared in September 1978 [2] . It had a Fairchild F8 8-Bit processor running with 1.78 MHz, 2 KB ROM, and 256 bytes RAM. The program was a clone of the Data Cash Systems Inc.CompuChess program, which was developed by David B. Goodrich & Associates [3] , while other sources assume David Levy was involved in the development [4][5] . The Mk I was sold in the USA by Joseph Sugarman's company JS&A[6] , and in 1979 Data Cash Systems took legal action against JS&A for breach of copyright [7] , which failed because it transpired that the copyright had not been adequately protected in terms of USA law [8][9][10][11].
The SciSys Split
The Novag Chess Champion MK II in 1979 had a 6502 compatible 6504 CPU with a program by Peter Jennings. Novag's third computer, the Chess Champion Super System III with a 6502 CPU and a program developed by Mike Johnson and David Levy was already manufactured by SciSys-W Ltd. Despite commercial success, Winkler and Auge decided to part company in late 1979. Winkler had already founded SciSys, and Auge continued with Novag, both first sharing their products, for instance Chess Partner 2000 acknowledged to "programmer" David Levy was delivered in different boxes [12] .
Kittinger
In 1981, Peter Auge hired David Kittinger and his MyChess program which went into the Novag Micro Chess, Super Sensor IV and Savant all in 1981. In the following years the Robot Adversary, Constellation and most notably the Super Constellation appeared. Their cooperation continued over 20 year, despite reissue of his programs in new models, Kittinger made a last update for the Novag Star Diamond in 2003 [13]. In 2009, Novag was sold to a company called Solar Wide Industrial Ltd, but continued to manufacture chess computers [14] .
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The First Clone
Novag's first chess computer, the Chess Champion MK I appeared in September 1978 [2] . It had a Fairchild F8 8-Bit processor running with 1.78 MHz, 2 KB ROM, and 256 bytes RAM. The program was a clone of the Data Cash Systems Inc. CompuChess program, which was developed by David B. Goodrich & Associates [3] , while other sources assume David Levy was involved in the development [4] [5] . The Mk I was sold in the USA by Joseph Sugarman's company JS&A [6] , and in 1979 Data Cash Systems took legal action against JS&A for breach of copyright [7] , which failed because it transpired that the copyright had not been adequately protected in terms of USA law [8] [9] [10] [11].The SciSys Split
The Novag Chess Champion MK II in 1979 had a 6502 compatible 6504 CPU with a program by Peter Jennings. Novag's third computer, the Chess Champion Super System III with a 6502 CPU and a program developed by Mike Johnson and David Levy was already manufactured by SciSys-W Ltd. Despite commercial success, Winkler and Auge decided to part company in late 1979. Winkler had already founded SciSys, and Auge continued with Novag, both first sharing their products, for instance Chess Partner 2000 acknowledged to "programmer" David Levy was delivered in different boxes [12] .Kittinger
In 1981, Peter Auge hired David Kittinger and his MyChess program which went into the Novag Micro Chess, Super Sensor IV and Savant all in 1981. In the following years the Robot Adversary, Constellation and most notably the Super Constellation appeared. Their cooperation continued over 20 year, despite reissue of his programs in new models, Kittinger made a last update for the Novag Star Diamond in 2003 [13]. In 2009, Novag was sold to a company called Solar Wide Industrial Ltd, but continued to manufacture chess computers [14] .Novag Best-Publication Award
Winners of the Novag Best-Publication Award 1992-1996:Publications
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