Changes

Jump to: navigation, search

ACM North American Computer Chess Championship

310 bytes added, 17:05, 16 November 2020
no edit summary
[[FILE:Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) logo.svg|border|right|thumb| ACM logo <ref>[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Association_for_Computing_Machinery Association for Computing Machinery from Wikipedia]</ref> <ref>[https://www.acm.org/| Association for Computing Machinery]</ref> ]]
The [[ACM|Association for Computing Machinery]] (ACM) hosted the first major chess tournament for computers, the '''1st ACM United States Computer Chess Championship''', in September 1970 in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_City New York]. The event was organized by [[Monroe Newborn]], Professor of Computer Science at [[McGill University]] <ref>[http://webdocs.cs.ualberta.ca/~tony/Public/Awit-Wita-ComputerChess/Awit-Wita-ReadMe/wita-history-readme.txt Wita-Awit - readme.txt] by [[Tony Marsland]]</ref>. The ACM chess events, in 1975 renamed the '''ACM North American Computer Chess Championship''', and in 1991 the '''ACM International Computer Chess Championship''', were canceled in 1995 as [[Deep Blue]] was preparing for the first match against world chess champion [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garry_Kasparov [Garry Kasparov]].
=Editions=
=Publications=
* [[Jonathan Schaeffer]] ('''2019'''). ''Special Issue on Computer Chess Tournaments: The 50-Year Experiment''. Call for Papers, [[ICGA Journal#41_4|ICGA Journal, Vol. 41, No. 4]]
* [[Jonathan Schaeffer]] ('''2020'''). ''Fifty years of computer chess''. [[ICGA Journal#42_23|ICGA Journal, Vol. 42, Nos. 2-3]]
* [[Jonathan Schaeffer]] ('''2020'''). ''The 1970 United States computer chess championship: The start of the longest-running experiment in computer science history''. [[ICGA Journal#42_23|ICGA Journal, Vol. 42, Nos. 2-3]]
=Forum Posts=

Navigation menu