Wim Rens

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Willem Rens [1]

Willem (Wim) J. Rens,
a Dutch retired IT professional and analyst, and in the 80s as chess programmer author of Gambiet, which was the first commercial chess program from the Netherlands, written in Z80 assembly language for TRS-80 home computers. After some years of success in the early 80s and involvement with Microtrend, he had several ideas to further improve the program, but most failed due to hardware limitations and the complexity barrier. About thirty years later, he became challenged to try his old ideas about chess programming with Visual Basic with the result of GambitVB.

Gabmol

Inspired by the the book Sargon: A Computer Chess Program by Dan and Kathe Spracklen [2], Wim Rens started chess programming in early 1979. His first program dubbed Gabmol, written in Z80 assembly language for the TRS-80 home computers, made some publicity in the Netherlands when it won a match versus Peter van Diepen's program IGM which ran on a UNIVAC 418 III [3].

Microtrend

Wim Rens in his June 1981 Databus article Grondslagen van computerschaak on how it began with Microtrend and Gambiet [4]:

The second milestone of Gambiet's triumph was achieved under the watchful eye of the firm Microtrend. At home of one of their directors were two TSR-80's, one running Sargon II, the other Gabmol. Microtrend was looking for a chess game in their collection, and end of June a decision was made and a contract placed. The result was impressive: two equally fast Tandy computers and Gambiet had no trouble with the once-famous Sargon. 

Gambiet

Wim Rens was hired by Microtrend and his program went commercial called Gambiet 80. After the shared third place at the first WMCCC 1980 in London, Gambiet further evolved and became the software of the Videopac C 7010 module of the Philips Videopac G7000 video game console in 1982 [5].

Photos

DeVriesRens.jpg

Luuk de Vries talking with Wim Rens at the DOCCC 1982 [6]

GambitVB

When Microsoft introduced the .NET framework in 2002, Wim Rens tried his old chess programming ideas with Visual Basic, and performance critical parts of subsequent versions rewritten in none managed C++ . GambitVB plays reasonable chess, has an own GUI, and is open source [7].

Publications

External Links

References

  1. Image frim former GambitVB Chess site
  2. Dan Spracklen, Kathe Spracklen (1978). SARGON: A Computer Chess Program. Hayden Bk.Co., amazon.com
  3. Wim Rens (1981). Grondslagen van computerschaak. Databus 06-81, pp. 13-15, pdf hosted by Hein Veldhuis (Dutch)
  4. Excerpt from: Wim Rens (1981). Grondslagen van computerschaak. Databus 06-81, pp. 13-15, pdf hosted by Hein Veldhuis (Dutch)
  5. Philips, Videopac C 7010, French Manual, pdf
    © 1982 N.V. Philips Gloeilampenfabrieken - Holland
    © 1982 Wim Rens, Microtrend International - Holland
  6. Image from Peter van Diepen (ed.) (1983). Toernooibulletin van het Nederlands kampioenschap computerschaak 1982. pdf hosted by Hein Veldhuis
  7. Native Engine List from Ron Murawski's Computer-Chess Wiki

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