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'''[[Main Page|Home]] * [[People]] * Johann Joss'''
 
'''[[Main Page|Home]] * [[People]] * Johann Joss'''
  
[[FILE:JohannJoss.jpg|border|right|thumb|link=http://info.uptrend.ch/uptrend/page/display/johanns-blog?v=29|  Johann Joss <ref>[http://info.uptrend.ch/uptrend/page/display/johanns-blog?v=29 Johanns Blog]</ref> ]]  
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[[FILE:JohannJoss.jpg|border|right|thumb|240px|link=http://info.uptrend.ch/uptrend/page/display/johanns-blog?v=29|  Johann Joss <ref>[http://info.uptrend.ch/uptrend/page/display/johanns-blog?v=29 Johanns Blog]</ref> ]]  
  
 
'''Johann Joss''',<br/>
 
'''Johann Joss''',<br/>
a Swiss mathematician and Ph.D in mathematics from the [[ETH Zurich]], in the 90s affiliated with the [http://www.iumsp.ch/ University Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine of Lausanne]. He already started computer chess programming in 1967 on a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CDC_1604 CDC I604 A] <ref>[http://www.computerwoche.de/a/computer-logik-im-koeniglichen-spiel,1205123 Erstes Computer-Schachturnier der Gesellschaft für Informatik] October 17, 1975, [[Computerworld#Woche|Computerwoche]] 42/1975 (German)</ref>, and his chess program [[Tell]] participated at the first two [[World Computer Chess Championship|World Computer Chess Championships]], the [[WCCC 1974]] in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stockholm Stockholm] and the [[WCCC 1977]] in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toronto Toronto], and won the first German computer chess tournament, the [[First GI Computer Chess Tournament]], 1975 in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dortmund Dortmund] <ref>[http://www.computerwoche.de/a/tells-geschoss-schachmatt,1205122 Tells Geschoß: Schachmatt], October 17, 1975, [[Computerworld#Woche|Computerwoche]] 42/1975 (German)</ref> <ref>[http://www.computerwoche.de/heftarchiv/1975/42/1205115/ Computerschach: Mini besiegt Maxi], October 17, 1975, [[Computerworld#Woche|Computerwoche]] 42/1975 (German)</ref>.  
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a Swiss mathematician and Ph.D in mathematics from the [[ETH Zurich]], in the 90s affiliated with the [http://www.iumsp.ch/ University Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine of Lausanne]. He already started computer chess programming in 1967 on a [[CDC 1604|CDC 1604 A]] <ref>[http://www.computerwoche.de/a/computer-logik-im-koeniglichen-spiel,1205123 Erstes Computer-Schachturnier der Gesellschaft für Informatik] October 17, 1975, [[Computerworld#Woche|Computerwoche]] 42/1975 (German)</ref>, and his chess program [[Tell]] participated at the first two [[World Computer Chess Championship|World Computer Chess Championships]], the [[WCCC 1974]] in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stockholm Stockholm] and the [[WCCC 1977]] in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toronto Toronto], and won the first German computer chess tournament, the [[First GI Computer Chess Tournament]], 1975 in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dortmund Dortmund] <ref>[http://www.computerwoche.de/a/tells-geschoss-schachmatt,1205122 Tells Geschoß: Schachmatt], October 17, 1975, [[Computerworld#Woche|Computerwoche]] 42/1975 (German)</ref> <ref>[http://www.computerwoche.de/heftarchiv/1975/42/1205115/ Computerschach: Mini besiegt Maxi], October 17, 1975, [[Computerworld#Woche|Computerwoche]] 42/1975 (German)</ref>.  
  
 
=Tit for Tat=
 
=Tit for Tat=
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'''[[People|Up one level]]'''
 
'''[[People|Up one level]]'''
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[[Category:Chess Programmer|Joss]]
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[[Category:Mathematician|Joss]]

Latest revision as of 13:05, 24 January 2020

Home * People * Johann Joss

Johann Joss [1]

Johann Joss,
a Swiss mathematician and Ph.D in mathematics from the ETH Zurich, in the 90s affiliated with the University Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine of Lausanne. He already started computer chess programming in 1967 on a CDC 1604 A [2], and his chess program Tell participated at the first two World Computer Chess Championships, the WCCC 1974 in Stockholm and the WCCC 1977 in Toronto, and won the first German computer chess tournament, the First GI Computer Chess Tournament, 1975 in Dortmund [3] [4].

Tit for Tat

Johann Joss also researched on the Prisoner's dilemma and Tit for tat and participated in Robert Axelrod's tournaments [5] [6] on the topic of evolution of cooperation.

Selected Publications

External Links

About Floating Point Arithmetic

References

Up one level