Patsoc
Table of Contents
See also
Selected Publications
External Links
References
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Patsoc
,
a computer chess program by
Hans Berliner
written in
BLISS 36
[1]
, which played the
WCCC 1983
in
New York
, running on a
DEC
PDP-10
with
36 bit
word length. Patsoc first implemented the evaluation feature of the
crippled majority
with
doubled pawns
involved
[2]
. Nevertheless, Patsoc is the acronym of "Plays a terrible sort of Chess"
[3]
.
See also
Acronym
Selected Publications
Hans Berliner
(
1985
).
Computer Chess at Carnegie Mellon University
.
Advances in Computer Chess 4
Hans Berliner
(
1987
).
Some Innovations Introduced by Hitech
.
ICCA Journal
, Vol. 10, No. 3, pp. 111-117
External Links
Patsoc's ICGA Tournaments
References
^
The Fourth World Computer Chess Championship
(labeled 22nd ACM),
pdf
from
The Computer History Museum
,
pdf
from
Danny Kopec
^
Hans Berliner
(
1987
).
Some Innovations Introduced by Hitech
.
ICCA Journal
, Vol. 10, No. 3, pp. 111-117
^
Harold Bogner
(
1984
).
The New Champion
.
Chess Life
, February 1984,
pdf
from
The Computer History Museum
What links here?
Page
Date Edited
Advances in Computer Chess 4
Jan 22, 2018
Carnegie Mellon University
Feb 12, 2018
Doubled Pawn
Mar 27, 2017
Engines
Mar 10, 2018
Hans Berliner
Jun 10, 2017
Patsoc
Jan 7, 2016
PDP-10
Apr 20, 2018
Shy
Jul 19, 2016
WCCC 1983
Jan 20, 2018
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Table of Contents
Patsoc,
a computer chess program by Hans Berliner written in BLISS 36 [1], which played the WCCC 1983 in New York, running on a DEC PDP-10 with 36 bit word length. Patsoc first implemented the evaluation feature of the crippled majority with doubled pawns involved [2]. Nevertheless, Patsoc is the acronym of "Plays a terrible sort of Chess" [3].
See also
Selected Publications
External Links
References
What links here?
Up one Level