Difference between revisions of "Steven Edwards"

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* [[File:myopic.tar]]
 
* [[File:myopic.tar]]
 
* [[File:CookieCat.tar]]
 
* [[File:CookieCat.tar]]
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=External Links=
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* [https://rjlipton.wordpress.com/2015/01/20/a-computer-chess-analysis-interchange-format/ A Computer Chess Analysis Interchange Format] by [[Mathematician#RJLipton|Dick Lipton]] and [[Kenneth W. Regan|Ken Regan]], [https://rjlipton.wordpress.com/ Gödel's Lost Letter and P=NP], January 20, 2015
  
 
=References=  
 
=References=  

Revision as of 22:21, 12 November 2018

Home * People * Steven Edwards

Steven James Edwards, (February 7, 1957 - October 1, 2016 [1])
was an American computer scientist, BS and MS in Mathematics, and computer chess programmer. Steven Edwards coordinated and specified the PGN- and EPD-standards and the FEN-Position Description [2]. In 1994 he introduced a distance to mate endgame tablebase format, called the Edwards' Tablebases. He is author of multiple chess programs and toolkits, Spector, Symbolic, the Chess in Lisp (CIL) package [3] [4], a portable ChessLisp interpreter [5], and the Chess for Arduino Mega Myopic [6] and the Chess in Pascal CookieCat [7] projects [8]. Steven Edwards has been actively involved in Perft computations, where he computed and verified perft of the initial position up to a depth of 13, now available in the On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences [9] .

Steven Edwards died on October 1, 2016 at age 59 at his home in Raymond, New Hampshire, only a few weeks after his father James Edwards passed away [10], who introduced him to chess [11].

Selected Publications

[12]

Forum Posts

1990 ...

ACM 1994: Spector's games by Steven J. Edwards, rgc, June 29, 1994 » Spector

1995 ...

2000 ...

2005 ...

2008

2009

2010 ...

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015 ...

2016

Downloads

[16]

External Links

References

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