Difference between revisions of "John Stanback"

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* [https://www.stmintz.com/ccc/index.php?id=120287 Re: Zarkov news?] by [[John Stanback]], [[CCC]], July 18, 2000
 
* [https://www.stmintz.com/ccc/index.php?id=120287 Re: Zarkov news?] by [[John Stanback]], [[CCC]], July 18, 2000
 
* [http://www.foro.meca-web.es/viewtopic.php?f=9&t=72&start=30#p4486 La Máquina Preservadora 5. John Stanback, Mr. Zarkov] by Luis a, [[Computer Chess Forums|Meca Foro]], March 21, 2014 (Spanish)
 
* [http://www.foro.meca-web.es/viewtopic.php?f=9&t=72&start=30#p4486 La Máquina Preservadora 5. John Stanback, Mr. Zarkov] by Luis a, [[Computer Chess Forums|Meca Foro]], March 21, 2014 (Spanish)
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* [http://www.talkchess.com/forum3/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=63903&start=13 Re: Symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) scaling - SF8 and K10.4] by [[John Stanback]], [[CCC]], May 06, 2017 » [[Lazy SMP]]
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* [http://www.talkchess.com/forum3/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=68154&start=7 Re: Lazy SMP and 44 cores] by [[John Stanback]], [[CCC]], August 08, 2018 » [[Lazy SMP]]
  
 
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Revision as of 14:14, 9 December 2018

Home * People * John Stanback

John Stanback [1]

John Stanback,
an American electrical engineer and computer chess programmer. He started chess programming in about 1978 with Basic and Fortran, until he switched to Pascal and in 1986 to C. His early program SCP (Stanback Chess Program), was already published in 1987 as open source in comp.sources.games [2], and later evolved to GNU Chess. In 1989 John Stanback did a complete rewrite and called the new program Zarkov [3], which was subject of experiments with various ideas until recently. In June 2016, the successor of Zarkov dubbed Wasp was released, announced and hosted by Frank Quisinsky [4] [5].

Publications

Forum Posts

External Links

References

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