Herbert D. Raymond
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Home * People * Herbert D. Raymond
Herbert D. Raymond,
an American early chess programmer, during the 70s captain at the United States Marine Corps, San Diego, California [1].
He developed the chess program Genie, which played the ACM 1971 on a SDS 940
[2],
Scientific Data Systems' first machine to support the Berkeley Timesharing System
[3]
[4],
created by the University of California, Berkeley as part of their Project Genie that ran between 1964 and 1965 as smaller counterpart to MIT's Project MAC.
Publications
- Ben Mittman, Herbert D. Raymond et al. (1971) Computer Chess Programs (Panel). pdf from The Computer History Museum
References
- ↑ Ben Mittman, Herbert D. Raymond et al. (1971) Computer Chess Programs (Panel). pdf from The Computer History Museum
- ↑ SDS 940 Computer - console - CHM Revolution from The Computer History Museum
- ↑ Timesharing as a Business - CHM Revolution from The Computer History Museum
- ↑ Butler Lampson (1969). An Overview of the CAL Time-Sharing System. University of California, Berkeley, pdf