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At the 2013 Cork Congress Chess Open, a 16-year-old player was found to be using a chess program on a smartphone when his opponent confronted him in the toilets by kicking down the cubicle door and physically hauling him out. The opponent received a ten-month ban for violent conduct. The 16-year-old player was banned for four months for cheating.
Chess software comes in different forms. A chess playing program provides a graphical chessboard on which one can play a chess game against a computer. Such programs are available for personal computers, video game consoles, smartphones/tablet computers or mainframes/supercomputers.
At the World Computer Chess Championship in Reykjavík in 2005, Fruit 2.2 scored 8.5 out of 11, finishing in second place behind Zappa.. Until Version 2.1 (Peach), Fruit was free and open-source software subject to the requirements of the GNU General Public License and as such contributed much to the development in computer chess in recent years.
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikimedia Commons; ... Free chess software (7 P) I. Internet chess servers (1 C ...
Free and open-source software portal Video games portal This is a category of articles relating to chess games which can be freely used, copied, studied, modified, and redistributed by everyone that obtains a copy: " free software " or " open-source software ".
Kasparov Chessmate is a chess-playing computer program by The Learning Company for which Garry Kasparov is co-credited as game designer. Kasparov also makes an appearance as the last computer profile which has to be defeated in order to win the "Kasparov Chess Club" tournament. The program has two basic single-player modes. The first allows a ...
Jonny is a computer chess program written by the German mathematician and programmer Johannes Zwanzger. [1] [2] Jonny won the 2015 World Computer Chess Championship. [3] [4] It ran on a "btrzx3" linux cluster [5] of the University of Bayreuth using 2,400 AMD x86-64 2.8 GHz cores in total.
Vasik Rajlich started working on his chess program at the beginning of 2003. The first Rybka beta was released on December 2, 2005. The appearance of the free Rybka 1 beta and the first commercial version, Rybka 1 end of 2005 was a sensation, and Rybka soon became the dominating program leading rating lists by a huge margin. [20]