Carey wrote:Gerd,
You probably already have this info, but I came across a couple pages about it in David Levy & Monty Newborn's "How Computers Play Chess".
They call it an "analyzer" since it didn't do much searching.
It talks a bit about the eval, how mobility & attacks were calculated & scored, etc.
It only briefly mentions the SwapOff routine and doesn't mention any specifics.
They also give one game it played against Machiavelli (both done by hand simulation), which was an analyzer by D. Michie and S. Wylie some years before.
Not really a lot of info, however, obviously David Levy & Monty Newborn were familiar with it and had references that discussed it.
As for mentioning Rolf Smith & Frank Ceruti... I haven't been able to get in touch with Mr. Smith in a couple years. He had found an early printed copy of his program, but I didn't hear from him after that. No replies to any of my emails. But I haven't tried again in a year or so.
Hi Carey,
no, I don't have that book. You think M. Smith (SOMA program 1961, name literally from Bartel, Kraas, Schrüfer 1985 "Das grosse Computer Schach Buch", 'M' a typo or missing r for Mr.) might be Rolf C. Smith, co-author of SCHACH, which competed the early ACM-events from 1970? Yes, makes some sense, if I read the description of SCHACH. Could really be that Rolf C. Smith had an earlier program SOMA.
Schach was written in Fortran and already introduced the concept of Static Exchange Evaluation for Move Ordering and Pruning:
The backbone of SCHACH is the concept of piece board control, defined as all squares on which a piece exerts direct or indirect influence (can move to in a capture mode). Utilizing this concept we have found that a pseudo-dynamic position projection can be effected in a static environment on a local scale.
Can you (or anybody else) identify these people from
Genie vs Schach at the 2nd North American Computer Chess Championship in Chicago, Illinois?

(not the German program Schach btw.)
Cheers,
Gerd