North American Computer Chess Championship
The North American Computer Chess Championship was a computer chess championship held from 1970 to 1994. It was organised by the Association for Computing Machinery and by Dr. Monty Newborn, Professor of Computer Science at McGill University.[1] It was one of the first computer chess tournaments. The 14th NACCC was also the World Computer Chess Championship.
Event # | Year | Location | Winner |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 1970 | New York, NY | Chess 3.0 |
2 | 1971 | Chicago | Chess 3.0 |
3 | 1972 | Boston | Chess 3.0 |
4 | 1973 | Atlanta | Chess 3.5 |
5 | 1974 | San Diego | Ribbit |
6 | 1975 | Minneapolis | Chess 4.4 |
7 | 1976 | Houston | Chess 4.5 |
8 | 1977 | Seattle | Chess 4.6 |
9 | 1978 | Washington, D.C. | Belle |
10 | 1979 | Detroit | Chess 4.9 |
11 | 1980 | Nashville | Belle |
12 | 1981 | Los Angeles | Belle |
13 | 1982 | Dallas | Belle[2] |
14 | 1983 | New York, NY | Cray Blitz |
15 | 1984 | San Francisco | Cray Blitz |
16 | 1985 | Denver | HiTech |
17 | 1986 | Dallas | Belle |
18 | 1987 | Dallas | ChipTest-M |
19 | 1988 | Orlando, Florida | Deep Thought |
20 | 1989 | Reno, Nevada | HiTech and Deep Thought |
21 | 1990 | Deep Thought | |
22 | 1991 | Albuquerque | Deep Thought II |
23 | 1993 | Indianapolis | Socrates II |
24 | 1994 | Cape May, New Jersey | Deep Thought II |
References
- ↑ Dr. Monty Newborn's homepage at McGill University
- ↑ Stinson, Craig (1982-01). "Chess Championship: Machines Play, People Watch". Softline. p. 6. Retrieved 13 July 2014. Check date values in:
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External links
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