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WCCC 1992

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The '''Seventh World Computer Chess Championship''' took place from November 23-27, [[Timeline#1992|1992]], at [[Technical University of Madrid|Universidad Politécnica de Madrid]] (UPM), [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madrid Madrid], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spain Spain]. The original [[El Ajedrecista]] by [[Leonardo Torres y Quevedo]] was an exhibit in the tournament hall <ref>[[Jaap van den Herik]], [[Bob Herschberg]] ('''1992'''). ''The 7th World Computer-Chess Championship. Report on the Tournament''. [[ICGA Journal#15_4|ICCA Journal, Vol. 15, No. 4]]</ref> .
The Seventh World Computer Chess Championship was a triumph for the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reduced_instruction_set_computing RISC] architecture - [[Ed Schroder|Ed Schröder]] won the title with the [[TASC]] [[ChessmachineChessMachine]] <ref>[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ChessMachine ChessMachine from Wikipedia]</ref> , with a program called [[Gideon]], a port of his [[Rebel]] program for an [[ARM2]] RISC Processor, plugged as [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISA_bus ISA card] into an [[IBM PC]]. Runner up [[Zugzwang (Program)|Zugzwang]] played with a grid of 1024 [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inmos Inmos] T800 [[Transputer]] <ref>[https://www.game-ai-forum.org/icga-tournaments/program.php?id=54 Zugzwang's ICGA Tournaments]</ref> . With [[Kasparov Sparc]], under the patronage of [[Saitek]], [[Kathe Spracklen|Kathe]] and [[Dan Spracklen]] played their last tournament, after losing the finish against the [[Chessmachine]]ChessMachine. [[Hans Berliner|Berliner's]] [[HiTech]] used [[B*]].
=Final Standing=
'''[[World Computer Chess Championship|Up one Level]]'''
 
[[Category:WCCC]]
[[Category:1992]]

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