Difference between revisions of "Lloyd L. Lank"

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In the early 80s, while affiliated with ''United Computing Systems, Inc.'', [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kansas_City,_Missouri Kansas City, Missouri], along with [[James A. Lank]], he developed the [[:Category:Mainframe|mainframe chess program]] [[Cube]] <ref>[https://www.trademarkia.com/correspondent-lloyd-l-lank-1-210740 Lloyd L. Lank - a Trademark Correspondent]</ref>, which ran on a [[Cray-1]], and participated as Cube '''2.0''' at the [[ACM 1980]] <ref>[https://www.computerhistory.org/chess/doc-431614f6cdeeb/ The Eleventh ACM's North American Computer Chess Championship] from [[The Computer History Museum]]</ref>, and as Cube '''2.1''' the [[ACM 1981]] <ref>[https://www.computerhistory.org/chess/doc-431614f6ce737/ The Twelfth ACM's North American Computer Chess Championship]from [[The Computer History Museum]]</ref>.  
 
In the early 80s, while affiliated with ''United Computing Systems, Inc.'', [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kansas_City,_Missouri Kansas City, Missouri], along with [[James A. Lank]], he developed the [[:Category:Mainframe|mainframe chess program]] [[Cube]] <ref>[https://www.trademarkia.com/correspondent-lloyd-l-lank-1-210740 Lloyd L. Lank - a Trademark Correspondent]</ref>, which ran on a [[Cray-1]], and participated as Cube '''2.0''' at the [[ACM 1980]] <ref>[https://www.computerhistory.org/chess/doc-431614f6cdeeb/ The Eleventh ACM's North American Computer Chess Championship] from [[The Computer History Museum]]</ref>, and as Cube '''2.1''' the [[ACM 1981]] <ref>[https://www.computerhistory.org/chess/doc-431614f6ce737/ The Twelfth ACM's North American Computer Chess Championship]from [[The Computer History Museum]]</ref>.  
 
He is further author of the [[IBM PC|PC]] chess program [[EGA Chess]], which participated at three [[United States Open Computer Chess Championship|United States Open Computer Chess Championships]] <ref>[[Roy Keeley]] ('''1988'''). ''The 4th Annual U.S. Open Computer Chess Championship''. [[ICGA Journal#11_23|ICCA Journal, Vol. 11, Nos. 2/3]]</ref>.
 
He is further author of the [[IBM PC|PC]] chess program [[EGA Chess]], which participated at three [[United States Open Computer Chess Championship|United States Open Computer Chess Championships]] <ref>[[Roy Keeley]] ('''1988'''). ''The 4th Annual U.S. Open Computer Chess Championship''. [[ICGA Journal#11_23|ICCA Journal, Vol. 11, Nos. 2/3]]</ref>.
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=Photos=
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[[FILE:USOCCC88SamoleLank.jpg|none|border|text-bottom]]
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[[USOCCC 1988]]: [[Sidney Samole]] and[[Lloyd L. Lank]] in [[Excel|Excel Mach III]] vs. [[EGA Chess]] <ref>Photo by [[Roy Keeley|Roy Keeley Jr.]],  [[ICGA Journal#11_23|ICCA Journal, Vol. 11, Nos. 2/3]], pp. 95</ref>
  
 
=Chess Programs=
 
=Chess Programs=

Revision as of 09:23, 16 June 2019

Home * People * Lloyd L. Lank

Lloyd L. Lank
an American computer scientist and chess programmer. In the early 80s, while affiliated with United Computing Systems, Inc., Kansas City, Missouri, along with James A. Lank, he developed the mainframe chess program Cube [1], which ran on a Cray-1, and participated as Cube 2.0 at the ACM 1980 [2], and as Cube 2.1 the ACM 1981 [3]. He is further author of the PC chess program EGA Chess, which participated at three United States Open Computer Chess Championships [4].

Photos

USOCCC88SamoleLank.jpg

USOCCC 1988: Sidney Samole andLloyd L. Lank in Excel Mach III vs. EGA Chess [5]

Chess Programs

External Links

References

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