SPOC,
an early chess program for the IBM PC, written in 8086assembly by Jacques Middlecoff. SPOC stands for Selective Pruning Optimization Chess, claimed a new algorithm for the game, and was commercially available in 1983, reviewed in an PC Magazine article by chess player and programmer Dave Whitehouse[1]. SPOC played the ACM 1985 on a PC, searching about 300 nodes per second[2][3], with a good result versus two Canadian programs where some repetition issues occurred, further losing from the third Canadian entry Phoenix and from CHAOS.
an early chess program for the IBM PC, written in 8086 assembly by Jacques Middlecoff. SPOC stands for Selective Pruning Optimization Chess, claimed a new algorithm for the game, and was commercially available in 1983, reviewed in an PC Magazine article by chess player and programmer Dave Whitehouse [1]. SPOC played the ACM 1985 on a PC, searching about 300 nodes per second [2] [3], with a good result versus two Canadian programs where some repetition issues occurred, further losing from the third Canadian entry Phoenix and from CHAOS.
Table of Contents
Games
[5]Awit
ACM 1985, round 2, Awit - SPOCOstrich
ACM 1985, round 4, Ostrich - SPOCSee also
Publications
External Links
References
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