Antique chess programs

Discussion of chess software programming and technical issues.

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Carey
Posts: 313
Joined: Wed Mar 08, 2006 8:18 pm

Re: Antique chess programs

Post by Carey »

Well, it looks like the archive that I thought was the final version of my antique / classic chess program website wasn't actually the last one. Oh well.

It doesn't have Awit or Blitz & CrayBlitz source. Those can be added by others though. (I notice that Mr. Marsland has released more of his chess program work. That needs to be added.)

Here is a drop box link for what I have found so far.

https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/108 ... essWiki.7z

(I'll leave this up for a week or so.)

Read the ReadMe.txt for some more info.

I will gather up the OCR'ed source to two versions of CrayBlitz and Blitz and post a link to those too. I have no plans to try and post the scan images of CrayBlitz & Blitz though. 8gig or so is just too much for me to find some place to upload.

Somebody else needs to take the time and do Mr Marslands stuff again.

This really does need to be a community effort.... I hope y'all can come up with some reasonable way to archive this stuff as well as continue to gather.


I still feel like there was more what I'm posting. Stuff that wasn't ready to release or stuff that the author shared but didn't want me to post. (Oh expletive... I better check that for that ASAP! My memory is so bad that if I didn't make note of it, there's no way I'll remember now!)
Gerd Isenberg
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Location: Hattingen, Germany

Re: Antique chess programs

Post by Gerd Isenberg »

Carey
Posts: 313
Joined: Wed Mar 08, 2006 8:18 pm

Re: Antique chess programs

Post by Carey »

Gerd Isenberg wrote:your museum on web archive:
http://web.archive.org/web/200712211158 ... /Chess.htm
That, I think, is the one I put up on drop box.

However, I had a newer one that included Awit and BLitz & CrayBlitz source and some more notes. I didn't upload that one because .... I don't remember. Most likely I just simply didn't get around to it and it just never happened.
Carey
Posts: 313
Joined: Wed Mar 08, 2006 8:18 pm

Re: Antique chess programs

Post by Carey »

I've gathered the OCR'ed source for CrayBlitz 43g, 47a, and the CAL for 43c, as well as Blitz 69.

I'm also going to include the scans for those printouts. Thanks to the TIF image format, they are much smaller than the PNG or JPG that I had used. Didn't even remember doing TIF but I guess I was planning to post that too since OCR'ing FORTRAN is a joke.

I'll have to upload it tomorrow when I have decent net connection speed.

I think that should be all that I'm likely to find on the archive drives that I have with me.

Still missing Tony Marsland's AWIT, but that can be easily re-downloaded by anybody.

I think I once got in contact with Mr. Raymond about GENIE. He had a printed copy but no way to scan it at the time. Somebody could do a follow up.

Larry Atkin had a micro program or two and I think he was willing to distribute them if anybody could manage to get them off floppies. Somebody needs to contact him again.

Recontact Dan Spracklen about source for Sargon 2 & 3 etc.

I have Zolrand Chess, as well as Borland Chess and Borland Chess for Windows, but I never included them due to lack of permission. (That was why I didn't include a bunch of commercial micro programs from the 80s... if you aren't in the U.S. then it might not matter so much since they are all abandonware.)

Never could get hold of Dave Kittenger about MyChess.

And lots of other programs... More programs than I had ability to hunt for.

I hope somebody manages to set things up so that people can contribute to programs & authors they find. I wanted to way bak then but never could find a place to do it and then my energy ran out for all my hobbies.
:( :(

I was also once trying to gather up interesting stories and happenings from the old tournaments but I didn't get far.
Carey
Posts: 313
Joined: Wed Mar 08, 2006 8:18 pm

Re: Antique chess programs

Post by Carey »

Okay, here is the dropbox link for the OCR source for Blitz and two versions of CrayBlitz.

https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/108711463/Blitz.7z

I'll leave the link active for a week or so.

I think those two links have all that I have handy.

I was concentrating on the oldest programs from the 60s and 70s since that's where my historical interest lay, (and the most chance of stuff being lost!) but as you can see my success was some what limited.

I couldn't find some, didn't get answers from others, and others didn't have copies anymore. Tapes no longer working, floppies no longer readable, paper tape damaged, stuff buried in piles and piles of accumulated collections of a lifetime, etc.

I never really got around to doing all the micro programs from the 80s because there was no safe legal way to distribute a copy. A lot of abandonware places manage to survive with stuff that old but I didn't want to take the legal risk.

For those that live outside the U.S., have fun archiving them!

I hope somebody manages to do something with the stuff I'm providing and the community can help save computer chess history, all the way from the 60s onward.

I should have done this years ago but I didn't get around to it. I have to wait for the urge to do some particular thing as well as the energy to do it. A lot of things just "aren't worth the effort" like they used to be.
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stegemma
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Full name: Stefano Gemma

Re: Antique chess programs

Post by stegemma »

Carey wrote:[...]I have to wait for the urge to do some particular thing as well as the energy to do it. A lot of things just "aren't worth the effort" like they used to be.
For recent personal facts, I really understand you're last sentence so I say you sincerely "good luck!".
Author of Drago, Raffaela, Freccia, Satana, Sabrina.
http://www.linformatica.com
Gerd Isenberg
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Location: Hattingen, Germany

Re: Antique chess programs

Post by Gerd Isenberg »

Carey wrote: I still feel like there was more what I'm posting. Stuff that wasn't ready to release or stuff that the author shared but didn't want me to post. (Oh expletive... I better check that for that ASAP! My memory is so bad that if I didn't make note of it, there's no way I'll remember now!)
Thank you, Carey. I particulary like the Beal draft papers/alg1986review.txt from 2006 of the recently discussed nullmove-quiescence.
Carey
Posts: 313
Joined: Wed Mar 08, 2006 8:18 pm

Re: Antique chess programs

Post by Carey »

Gerd Isenberg wrote:
Carey wrote: I still feel like there was more what I'm posting. Stuff that wasn't ready to release or stuff that the author shared but didn't want me to post. (Oh expletive... I better check that for that ASAP! My memory is so bad that if I didn't make note of it, there's no way I'll remember now!)
Thank you, Carey. I particulary like the Beal draft papers/alg1986review.txt from 2006 of the recently discussed nullmove-quiescence.
You are welcome.

Nearly all, if not all, of the authors I did manage to get hold of were friendly and quite willing to help with whatever they had left.

It was just so hard for me to find people back then. Not as many search engines for people etc. as now, I guess. Perhaps now days, a subscription to a couple "find people" sites would find most of them in minutes... :)

If the computer chess community was to continue the project before it's too late, there's not much telling what other info, programs, stories, notes, etc. that might be recovered. They can even start expanding into the 80's micro programs. (Admittedly the Computer History Museum has lots of stuff, but their focus isn't computer chess.)

Even if it isn't technically useful, it can still be historically important, like the scans of a few of the original punch cards for KAISSA. Obviously not a lot of use, but it is a link to the program.
bob
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Location: Birmingham, AL

Re: Antique chess programs

Post by bob »

Gerd Isenberg wrote:
Carey wrote: I still feel like there was more what I'm posting. Stuff that wasn't ready to release or stuff that the author shared but didn't want me to post. (Oh expletive... I better check that for that ASAP! My memory is so bad that if I didn't make note of it, there's no way I'll remember now!)
Thank you, Carey. I particulary like the Beal draft papers/alg1986review.txt from 2006 of the recently discussed nullmove-quiescence.
Are you talking about "Selective search without tears?" I think I have the advances in computer chess book where that was first published...
jwes
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Joined: Sat Jul 01, 2006 7:11 am

Re: Antique chess programs

Post by jwes »

Have you looked at the Internet Archive (https://archive.org/index.php)? It has a couple hundred chess programs already.