Difference between revisions of "Ren Wu"

From Chessprogramming wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "'''Home * People * Ren Wu''' FILE:RenWu.jpg|border|right|thumb|link=https://www.linkedin.com/in/ren-wu-944162/| Ren Wu <ref>[https://www.linkedin.com/in/...")
 
Line 9: Line 9:
  
 
=Programs=
 
=Programs=
Ren Wu's Chinese and Western chess programs were [https://www.game-ai-forum.org/icga-tournaments/program.php?id=274 Surprise], two times Chinese chess Gold Medal winner at the [[3rd Computer Olympiad#ChineseChess|3rd]] and [[4th Computer Olympiad#ChineseChess|4th Computer Olympiad]], and the chess program [[Initiative]] which did not compete in [[ICCA]] tournaments <ref>[https://groups.google.com/d/msg/rec.games.chess.computer/VnaUuGmkuQQ/qCmmDeYAIPkJ WMCCC Jakarta] by [[Chris Whittington]], [[Computer Chess Forums|rgcc]], August 8, 1996</ref> <ref>[https://groups.google.com/d/msg/rec.games.chess.computer/ZY2Hq4e5RyE/9nseFZx1xQgJ Re: Fritz5 ECM test suite results] by [[Ren Wu]], [[Computer Chess Forums|rgcc]], September 6, 1997</ref>.  
+
Ren Wu's Chinese and Western chess programs were [[Surprise (Xiangqi)|Surprise]], two times Chinese chess Gold Medal winner at the [[3rd Computer Olympiad#ChineseChess|3rd]] and [[4th Computer Olympiad#ChineseChess|4th Computer Olympiad]], and the chess program [[Initiative]] which did not compete in [[ICCA]] tournaments <ref>[https://groups.google.com/d/msg/rec.games.chess.computer/VnaUuGmkuQQ/qCmmDeYAIPkJ WMCCC Jakarta] by [[Chris Whittington]], [[Computer Chess Forums|rgcc]], August 8, 1996</ref> <ref>[https://groups.google.com/d/msg/rec.games.chess.computer/ZY2Hq4e5RyE/9nseFZx1xQgJ Re: Fritz5 ECM test suite results] by [[Ren Wu]], [[Computer Chess Forums|rgcc]], September 6, 1997</ref>.  
 
According to [[Chris Whittington]] the chess software for the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psion_Series_3 Psion 3a] [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_digital_assistant PDA] was written by Ren Wu <ref>[https://groups.google.com/d/msg/comp.sys.psion/7XLMSdq4kfY/NGqToXHc30EJ Re: Chess software for psion] post 5 by [[Chris Whittington]], [[Computer Chess Forums|rgcc]], April 18, 1996</ref>.  
 
According to [[Chris Whittington]] the chess software for the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psion_Series_3 Psion 3a] [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_digital_assistant PDA] was written by Ren Wu <ref>[https://groups.google.com/d/msg/comp.sys.psion/7XLMSdq4kfY/NGqToXHc30EJ Re: Chess software for psion] post 5 by [[Chris Whittington]], [[Computer Chess Forums|rgcc]], April 18, 1996</ref>.  
  

Revision as of 15:48, 3 January 2019

Home * People * Ren Wu

Ren Wu [1]

Ren Wu,
a Chinese American computer scientist in the big data, deep learning industry and former Xiangqi and chess programmer. He holds a Ph.D. from Queen Mary, University of London, and was affiliated with the Hewlett Packard Intelligent Information Management Lab in Palo Alto, California, focusing on enabling near real-time business intelligence with robust, scalable data management, data-intensive analytics and fusion of structured and unstructured information, GPU computing, and massively parallel algorithms. More recently, Ren Wu is founder and CEO at NovuMind, producing the NovuTensor chip, a special-purpose processor designed to perform tensor computation for convolutional neural networks [2] [3] [4].

Programs

Ren Wu's Chinese and Western chess programs were Surprise, two times Chinese chess Gold Medal winner at the 3rd and 4th Computer Olympiad, and the chess program Initiative which did not compete in ICCA tournaments [5] [6]. According to Chris Whittington the chess software for the Psion 3a PDA was written by Ren Wu [7].

ICGA Journal Award

Along with Don Beal, Ren Wu researched and published on Retrograde Analysis for Chinese Chess Endgame Tablebases, and won the 2002 ICGA Journal Award [8].

Selected Publications

[9] [10]

2000 ...

2010 ...

Forum Posts

Wu/Beal predates Koistinen by Guy Haworth, CCC, December 04, 2001
Re: Wu/Beal predates Koistinen by Ren Wu, CCC, December 04, 2001

External Links

References

Up one level