Difference between revisions of "Dan Spracklen"
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Revision as of 09:35, 26 June 2019
Dan Spracklen,
an American computer scientist and microcomputer chess pioneer. Along with his wife Kathe, Dan started chess programming in 1977 on a Z-80 based Wavemate Jupiter III [2] in assembly language. Their first program, Sargon [3] had a one or two ply search without quiescence but exchange evaluation [4]. After the success at The Second West Coast Computer Faire MCCT in March 1978, and the shared third place at ACM 1978, the Spracklens became professional computer chess programmers. Sargon II was ported to various early home computers, for instance TRS-80 and 6502 based Apple II [5], as well as dedicated units as Chafitz ARB Sargon 2.5 [6].
Contents
Photos
Kathe and Dan Spracklen, ACM 1978 [7]
David Kittinger and Dan Spracklen at WMCCC 1983 [8]
Fidelity
After civil proceedings between manufacturer Applied Concepts and their sales company Chafitz, who first marketed their Sargon 2.5 program, the Spracklens began their long term collaboration with Sidney Samole and Fidelity Electronics in the 80s. Beside other successes, their computers won the first four World Microcomputer Chess Championships, Chess Challenger the WMCCC 1980, Fidelity X the WMCCC 1981, Elite Auto Sensory the WMCCC 1983 and Fidelity Elite X the WMCCC 1984 (shared).
Saitek
In 1989 or 1990, soon after Samole sold Fidelity to Hegener & Glaser, Kathe and Dan Spracklen started to work for Eric Winkler and Saitek, and developed a program for Sparc processors. The loss of Kasparov Sparc against Ed Schröder's ChessMachine [9] in Madrid 1992, almost ended their involvement in computer chess when they didn't win that world title [10].
Oral History
Excerpt from their Oral History [11]:
How it started
Danny Spracklen:
Yes, the first time I saw Kathleen, she was hunched over a chess program, or a chessboard, in the cafeteria, studying a chess position. And I go, wow, that’s interesting. The young lady likes chess.
Kathleen Spracklen:
And it should be noted that Dan and I have played- as opponents in chess, we’ve played two games of chess. I won one and he won one, and we said, okay, good enough.
Danny Spracklen:
Well, I majored in math. And then when I got out of college, I looked for a job. And McDonald-Douglas in Santa Monica, offered me a position there, as a beginning computer programmer. So I moved up there and started learning how to program in Fortran. And I worked for them for three years.
The Last WCCC
Q:
Well, what bet you? What was it? What program ended up beating you and not making it?
Danny Spracklen:
I think it was... the Schroeder program, Rebel, or - I believe it was.
And he's still selling his program today, I think.
That was the end of it, yeah. That was our last big effort. We didn't make it and Sci Tech lost interest in us and - so we figured, well, it's been a good run, you know, let's do something else <laughter>
See also
Selected Publications
- Dan Spracklen, Kathe Spracklen (1978). SARGON: A Computer Chess Program. Hayden Bk.Co. ISBN: 978-0810451551, amazon.com
- Dan Spracklen, Kathe Spracklen (1978). First Steps in Computer Chess Programming. BYTE, Vol. 3, No. 10, pdf from The Computer History Museum
- Dan Spracklen, Kathe Spracklen (1978). An Exchange Evaluator for Computer Chess. BYTE, Vol. 3, No. 11
- Gardner Hendrie (2005). Oral History of Kathe and Dan Spracklen. pdf from The Computer History Museum
External Links
- Dan Spracklen's ICGA Tournaments
- Dan and Kathe Spracklen from ChessComputers.org
- Search the Mastering the Game exhibition and on-line collection from The Computer History Museum
- Oral History of Kathleen and Danny Spracklen, March 2, 2005 by Gardner Hendrie, The Computer History Museum
- Historic Pictures by Ed Schröder
- Computer Chess by Dan and Kathe Spracklen from AtariArchives.org - archiving vintage computer books, information, and software
References
- ↑ Kathe and Dan Spracklen at the 9th ACM North American Computer Chess Championship, Washington, DC by Monroe Newborn from The Computer History Museum
- ↑ Jupiter II-1975
- ↑ Sargon from Wikipedia
- ↑ Sargon Z80 assembly listing by Dan and Kathe Spracklen, hosted by Andre Adrian
- ↑ Sargon II from C64-Wiki (German)
- ↑ Chafitz ARB Sargon 2.5
- ↑ Kathe and Dan Spracklen at the 9th ACM North American Computer Chess Championship, Washington, DC by Monroe Newborn from The Computer History Museum
- ↑ László Lindner, A SZÁMÍTÓGÉPES SAKK KÉPEKBEN című melléklete - The pictures of the Beginning of Chess Computers
- ↑ Madrid 1992, Chess, Round 5, Game 7 from the ICGA Tournament Database
- ↑ Gardner Hendrie (2005). Oral History of Kathe and Dan Spracklen. pdf from The Computer History Museum
- ↑ Gardner Hendrie (2005). Oral History of Kathe and Dan Spracklen. pdf from The Computer History Museum