[Computer Chess] A Chess Playing Program for the IBM 704 IN Proceedings of the Western Joint Computer Conference : Contrasts in Computers : Presented at Los Angeles, Calif. May 6-8, 1958

Bernstein, A.; De V. Roberts, M.; Arbckle, T.; Belsky, M. A.

Verlag: American Institute of Electrical Engineers, New York, 1959
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First Edition. 244 pages. Original pale blue printed paper wraps. Significant dampstaining to the bottom edge of the book, extending into the textblock, worst on the title page, and gradually fading toward the back of the volume. Does not affect readability, but rather the appearance of the book. Area affected is roughly 2.5 square inches at the worst point. Some minor browning to the covers, and a touch of dampstaining to the edge of the spine. Wraps. Contains "A Chess Playing Program for the IBM 704" by A. Bernstein, M. De V. Roberts, T. Arbckle, and M. A. Belsky starting on page 157. Claude Shannon wrote the first technical paper on computer chess in 1949, a paper which outlined an approach to computer chess without discussing a specific program. (see Origins of Cyberspace 882). In 1957 we find the first report of a computer playing chess, but using a restricted 6 x 6 square board. While sufficient to demonstrate the concept, the present paper, "A Chess Playing Program for the IBM 704" details a computer that can play a game on a true 8 x 8 board of chess. For the purist, this is the first real description of a chess playing computer. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 21674

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Titel: [Computer Chess] A Chess Playing Program for...
Verlag: American Institute of Electrical Engineers, New York
Erscheinungsdatum: 1959
Einband: Wraps
Zustand: Fair
Auflage: First Edition.

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Bernstein, A.; De V. Roberts, M.; Arbckle, T.; Belsky, M. A.
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Anbieter: Kuenzig Books ( ABAA / ILAB ), Topsfield, MA, USA

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Wraps. Zustand: Near Fine. First Edition. First Edition. 244 pages. Original pale blue printed paper wraps. Signature of F. M. Verzuh on the front wrapper. Lightly bumped at the extremities. A much brighter copy than usually found. Wraps. Previous owner Prof. Frank M. Verzuh worked in early computing and on the MIT Rapid Arithmetic Machine. He also attended the famous Moore School Lectures, where his notes were the basis for the printed reports on the Lectures. This conference was sponsored by the American Institute of Electrical Engineers (AIEE), The Institute of Radio Engineers (IRE) and The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). Verzuh (from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology) is listed in the Conference Officers list as one of the four representatives of the ACM. An early joint computer conference detailing the state of the art at the time. Contains a number of interesting articles including "A Chess Playing Program for the IBM 704" by A. Bernstein, M. De V. Roberts, T. Arbckle, and M. A. Belsky on pp 157-158; "The Univac M-460 Computer" by Thornton, Macauley and Toth on pp 70-73; "The Social Problems of Automation" by Laswell (with three other related articles and discussion on pp 7-16); and many others. These conferences were very much cross functional with scientists from across the field coming together to discuss progress in the field, exchanging ideas and discussing various presented papers. While not quite cradle period (the first joint conference was in 1951) these are important documents tracing the fast and furious progress made with computers across a wide swath of technologies and markets. And, the very beginning ideas of future groundbreaking discoveries can be seen forming in some of these articles. Scientists built rapidly on the progress of others, in much the same way as AI is progressing rapidly in today's world. One great example is Computer Chess which we've chosen to highlight here. Claude Shannon wrote the first technical paper on computer chess in 1949, a paper which outlined an approach to computer chess without discussing a specific program. In 1957 we find the first report of a computer playing chess, but using a restricted 6 x 6 square board. While the 1957 paper was sufficient to demonstrate proof of concept, the present paper, "A Chess Playing Program for the IBM 704" reported on here shows a computer that can play a game on a true 8 x 8 chess board. For the purist, this is the first real description of a chess playing computer - and it demonstrates the manner in which over a short period of time ideas can evolve from concept to fruition. LITERATURE: Hook and Norman, Origins of Cyberspace, #882 (noting Shannon's original paper in 1949) Hook and Norman, Origins of Cyberspace, #740 (discussing these important Joint AIEE-IRE Computer Conferences). Artikel-Nr. 29644

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