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HIARCS

13 bytes added, 09:17, 30 June 2018
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=Achievements=
The rewritten HIARCS soon competed in [[Tournamentsand Matches|computer chess tournaments]], in 1989 the [[1st Computer Olympiad#Chess|1st Computer Olympiad]], and the [[WMCCC 1991]] in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vancouver Vancouver] where HIARCS won the title of the ''World Amateur Microcomputer Chess Champion''. HIARCS won the gold medal (shared) at the [[4th Computer Olympiad#Chess|4th Computer Olympiad]], and became [[World Microcomputer Chess Championship|World Microcomputer Chess Software Champion]] at the [[WMCCC 1993]] in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Munich Munich]. HIARCS won several other tournaments or got top rankings, it won the [[IPCCC 2007]], after [[Rybka|Rybka's ]] [[World Computer Chess Championship#RybkaDisqualification|disqualification]] in June 2011 the [[WCCC 2008]], and the [[ICT 2009]] <ref>[http://www.hiarcs.com/hiarcs_milestones.htm HIARCS Milestone Achievements]</ref>. Further, HIARCS is two time [[World Chess Software Championship|World Chess Software Champion]], succeeding at the [[WCSC 2011]] in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tilburg Tilburg], the [[WCSC 2013]] in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yokohama Yokohama], and the [[PT 51]] and [[PT 53]].
=HIARCSTeamHIARCS Team=
HIARCS' [[Opening Book Authors|opening book authors]] over the time were [[Eric Hallsworth]], [[Sebastian Böhme]] and [[Harvey Williamson]], who is also operating HIARCS regularly at various computer chess tournaments.

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