Zarkov,
a commercial chess program by John Stanback written in C. The first version in 1989 was similar to John's GNU Chess 2.0, but used other data structures based on 0x88 and run on HP 9000 workstations or PCs with its own GUI. In 1990, John Stanback discovered a new pruning technique, a combination of evaluation heuristics and reduced depth search, which was implemented in Zarkov 2.5, also market as Grandmaster Chess[1]. Zarkov stores positions in which the score changes significantly between a shallow search (about 2 plies) and a deeper search into a Persistent Hash Table, retrieved at the start of each game to make Zarkov remember positions from previous games in its search to avoid worse positions in advance [2].
a commercial chess program by John Stanback written in C. The first version in 1989 was similar to John's GNU Chess 2.0, but used other data structures based on 0x88 and run on HP 9000 workstations or PCs with its own GUI. In 1990, John Stanback discovered a new pruning technique, a combination of evaluation heuristics and reduced depth search, which was implemented in Zarkov 2.5, also market as Grandmaster Chess [1]. Zarkov stores positions in which the score changes significantly between a shallow search (about 2 plies) and a deeper search into a Persistent Hash Table, retrieved at the start of each game to make Zarkov remember positions from previous games in its search to avoid worse positions in advance [2].
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Screenshot
Windows
A Windows DDE Server Zarkov was used with the Bookup [5] and Chess Assistant database programs. The Chess Engine Communication Protocol compliant but unreleased Zarkov 4.5X played some private engine tournaments with promising results. The so far final version Zarkov 5.0 is a Windows DLL file which was sold as an add-on engine for the Millenium Genius 6 aka Millennium Chess System interface [6].Tournament Play
Zarkov played the WCCC 1989, and the five late ACM North American Computer Chess Championships, ACM 1989, ACM 1990, ACM 1991, ACM 1993, and ACM 1994 where Zarkov became runner up behind Deep Thought II. It did quite well in the Aegon Tournaments held from 1994-1997, each time 4/6, and further played the BELCT 2001 and CCT4.Selected Games
ACM 1993
ACM 1993, round 3, B*Hitech - Zarkov [7]ACM 1994
ACM 1994, round 2, Cray Blitz - ZarkovBELCT 2001
BELCT 2001, round 7, Zarkov - Yace [8]See also
Forum Posts
1989
1990 ...
1995 ...
Re: Wchess 2000 and Zarkov 5 by Bert Seifriz, CCC, January 16, 1999 » WChess
2000 ...
2010 ...
External Links
Chess Program
Misc
Flash Gordon (serial) from Wikipedia
Frank Shannon from Wikipedia
Zarkov's rocket ship - Flash Gordon Wiki
References
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