In the 70s, along with his student Michael Valenti, Zvonko Vranesic was co-author of Chute (CHess, University of Toronto, Engineering). He supervised Valenti's 1974 Masters Thesis [3] , and co-authored Experiences with Chute after the WCCC 1977 in the Proceedings of the 1977 annual ACM conference [4] .
^Michael Valenti (1974). CHUTE I, An Easily Modifiable Chess Playing Program. M.A.Sc. thesis, Depature of Electrical Engineering, University of Toronto
a Croatian–Canadian chess and correspondence chess international master [1] , electrical engineer, and Professor Emeritus from Depature of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Computer Engineering Research Group, University of Toronto. His research interests covers Multiple-Valued Logic Systems and FPGA, beside other books on that topics, along with Stephen Brown [2], he co-authored Fundamentals of Digital Logic with VHDL (2000) and Verilog Design.
In the 70s, along with his student Michael Valenti, Zvonko Vranesic was co-author of Chute (CHess, University of Toronto, Engineering). He supervised Valenti's 1974 Masters Thesis [3] , and co-authored Experiences with Chute after the WCCC 1977 in the Proceedings of the 1977 annual ACM conference [4] .
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Chess Player
Zvonko Vranesic represented Canada at five Chess Olympiads [7] , he scored a Grandmaster norm at the 19th Chess Olympiad in Siegen [8] . Notable are his wins against Leonid Stein at the 16th Olympiad in Tel Aviv 1964 [9] , and versus David Levy in Lone Pine 1975 [10] .Selected Publications
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