Difference between revisions of "David Broughton"

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=Selected Publications=  
 
=Selected Publications=  
<ref>[http://ilk.uvt.nl/icga/journal/docs/References.pdf ICGA Reference Database] (pdf)</ref>
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<ref>[[ICGA Journal#RefDB|ICGA Reference Database]]</ref>
 
* [[David Levy]], [[David Broughton]], [[Mark Taylor]] ('''1989'''). ''The SEX Algorithm in Computer Chess''. [[ICGA Journal#12_1|ICCA Journal, Vol. 12, No. 1]] » [[SEX Algorithm]]
 
* [[David Levy]], [[David Broughton]], [[Mark Taylor]] ('''1989'''). ''The SEX Algorithm in Computer Chess''. [[ICGA Journal#12_1|ICCA Journal, Vol. 12, No. 1]] » [[SEX Algorithm]]
  

Revision as of 16:31, 16 November 2020

Home * People * David Broughton

David Broughton [1]

David C. Broughton, (died on February 02, 2017)
was a British computer consultant and computer chess programmer. His first chess program Vega, written on the Z80 North Star Horizon machine, had finished 2nd behind Sargon at the 2nd PCW-MCC tournament held in London in November 1979, and he was soon recruited by David Levy and Kevin O’Connell to work for their companies Philidor Software and since 1981 Intelligent Software. He worked on the project Philidor which 8086 port emerged to Parker Chess, and to the SciSys Chess Champion Mark V [2]. Broughton’s work for the Mark V was in the form of Z80 assembly. As the Mark V had a 6502 processor, the program had to be extensively translated and rewritten. So credit for the Mark V program has to go both to Mark Taylor and David Broughton, though David Levy is known to credit the Mark V to Taylor [3]. David Broughton died on February 02, 2017. His wife Dina died more recently on March 10, 2019 [4] [5].

Selected Publications

[6]

Forum Posts

External Links

References

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