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Mini Sensory Chess Challenger

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Mephisto Exclusive

Voice Sensory Chess Challenger - Model VSC. Change keyboard language windows 10. AC Adapter / Adaptor / Power Transformer. AC Adapter / Adaptor / Power Transformer. Vintage Fidelity Electronics Mini Sensory Chess Challenger Chess Computer Game 1980s. There are 32 chess challenger for sale on Etsy, and they cost $49.30 on average.

Mephisto Academy (1989)
Internal chip of a Mephisto computer, showing Hegener & Glaser initials, and program author name (Franz Morsch)
Mephisto Mythos (1995)

Fidelity Electronics Mini Sensory Chess Challenger

Mephisto Bistro (1995; also available in yellow and black)

Mephisto was a line of chess computers sold by Hegener & Glaser (H+G). In addition to integrated travel and sensory computers, they also sold a line of modular electronic autosensory boards (Modular, Exclusive, München, and Bavaria) which could accept different program, processor, and display modules.

Its strongest software was written by Richard Lang, who later ported it to personal computers as Psion and ChessGenius. Lang's Mephisto programs won six World Computer Chess Championships(WCCC) from 1984 to 1990. H&G also sold engines licensed from Johan de Koning, Ed Schröder, and Frans Morsch. Different models used different 8-bit, 16-bit and 32-bitprocessors, including MOS Technology 6502, Motorola 68HC05, Motorola 68000 and others.

Hegener & Glaser and its Mephisto brand were bought in 1994 by Saitek. Their computers currently sold under the Mephisto brand use programs written by Frans Morsch.

Hegener & Glaser (Mephisto)[edit]

  • 1969 established in Munich by Manfred Hegener and Florian Glaser for the production of semiconductors
  • 1978 the programmers Thomas Nitsche and Elmar Henne came into contact with H+G Thomas Nitsche and Elmar Henne
  • 1980 the 'Mephisto' Tradename was created, nicknamed Brikett (German for briquette) — the first German Chess Computer — programmed by Thomas Nietsche and Elmar Henne, appeared in stores.
  • 1983 Introduction of the Modular system, with the Mobil, Modular, and Exclusive boards and MM I module.
  • 1984 with Richard Lang and his Psion chess (Winner of World Microcomputer Chess Championship 1984 in Glasgow) began a long series of World Championship successes.
  • 1985 introduction of Lang's first Mephisto module, the Amsterdam 68000
  • 1989 over 90% of all chess computers sold in Germany were Mephistos
  • 1989 H+G buys 'Fidelity Electronics Inc.' for ~ 7 Million US $
  • 1990 the market for high-priced chess computers collapses. The cause is the growth of high-performance 486 PCs and the availability of newly developed low-cost strong chess software for PCs.
  • 1992 H+G shows losses of 28 Million DM
  • 1992 Ed Schröder wins with Gideon 3.1 (later sold as Mephisto Risc 2) the open 7. WCCC — ahead of large mainframe computers and special hardware machines
  • 1994 H+G is bought by Saitek for ~ 7 Million DM
  • 1994 Richard Lang's Genius (Mephisto London) beats Garry Kasparov in the Intel World Chess Grand Prix Turnier in London on a Pentium Processor
  • 1997 Manfred Hegener and Ossi Weiner form the company 'Millennium 2000 GmbH Hegener & Weiner' and produce the 'Millennium Schachpartner 2000', sold at 99 DM
  • 2005 Phoenix Chess Systems releases the Resurrection module for existing Mephisto modular boards. The hardware uses a 200 MHz ARM processor to run modern chess engines, resulting in the strongest dedicated chess computer ever created.
  • 2007 Phoenix Chess Systems releases an updated module set, the Resurrection II, with a faster 500 MHz XScale processor.

Mephisto Modular System[edit]

M66 super single 12 ga ithaca. Boards:

  • Mephisto Mobil (folding magnetic board)
  • Mephisto Modular (plastic autosensory board)
  • Mephisto Exclusive (40x40 cm wooden autosensory board)
  • Mephisto München (50x50 cm wooden autosensory board)
  • Mephisto Bavaria (50x50 cm wooden piece recognition board)

Modules:

Mephisto Marco Polo
  • Mephisto Almeria 68000
  • Mephisto Almeria 68020
  • Mephisto Amsterdam
  • Mephisto B&P
  • Mephisto Dallas 68000
  • Mephisto Dallas 68020
  • Mephisto Genius 68030
  • Mephisto III-S Glasgow
  • Mephisto London 68000
  • Mephisto London 68020
  • Mephisto London 68030
  • Mephisto Lyon 68000
  • Mephisto Lyon 68020
  • Mephisto Magellan
  • Mephisto Mirage
  • Mephisto MM I
  • Mephisto MM II
  • Mephisto MM IV
  • Mephisto MM V
  • Mephisto MM VI
  • Mephisto MM VI Schröder - was never distributed
  • Mephisto Mystery Modul
  • Mephisto PC Modul
  • Mephisto Polgar
  • Mephisto Polgar 10 MHz Beware: modified Exclusive Board
  • Mephisto Portorose 68000
  • Mephisto Portorose 68020
  • Mephisto Rebell 5.0
  • Mephisto Risc 1MB
  • Mephisto Risc 2
  • Mephisto Roma 68000
  • Mephisto Roma 68020
  • Mephisto Roma II
  • Mephisto Senator
  • Mephisto Vancouver 68000
  • Mephisto Vancouver 68020

Tournament machines[edit]

Mephisto sold limited edition versions of Lang's championship winning programs in dedicated boards with upgraded processors, cooling, and memory, similar to the hardware used in the championship tournaments.

  • Mephisto TM Roma (68020, 25 MHz)
  • Mephisto TM Almeria (68020, 30 MHz)
  • Mephisto TM Portorose (68030, 36 MHz)
  • Mephisto TM Lyon (68030, 36 MHz)
  • Mephisto TM Vancouver (68030, 36 MHz)
  • Mephisto TM London (68030, 36 MHz)
  • Mephisto Wundermaschine (80486, 66 MHz)

Other chess computers from the manufacturer Hegener & Glaser[edit]

  • Mephisto Academy
  • Mephisto Advanced Travel Chess Computer
  • Mephisto Alaska
  • Mephisto America
  • Mephisto America II
  • Mephisto Atlanta
  • Mephisto Avanti
  • Mephisto Beach
  • Mephisto Berlin 68000
  • Mephisto Berlin Professional
  • Mephisto Bistro
  • Mephisto Champion
  • Mephisto Chessbook
  • Mephisto Chess Challenger
  • Mephisto Chess Explorer
  • Mephisto Chess Trainer
  • Mephisto College
  • Mephisto ESB 6000
  • Mephisto Europa
  • Mephisto Europa A
  • Mephisto Excalibur
  • Mephisto Excalibur Glasgow
  • Mephisto Expert Travel Chess
  • Mephisto Explorer Pro
  • Mephisto HG 170
  • Mephisto HG 240
  • Mephisto HG 440
  • Mephisto HG 550
  • Mephisto I
  • Mephisto II
  • Mephisto III
  • Mephisto Junior (Sensor)
  • Mephisto Junior (Tasten)
  • Mephisto Junior Master Chess Computer
  • Mephisto Madison
  • Mephisto Maestro Travel Chess Computer
  • Mephisto Manhattan
  • Mephisto Marco Polo
  • Mephisto Master Chess
  • Mephisto Mega IV
  • Mein erster Mephisto
  • Mephisto Merlin 16K
  • Mephisto MeXs
  • Mephisto Miami
  • Mephisto Micro Travel Chess Computer
  • Mephisto Milano
  • Mephisto Milano Pro
  • Mephisto Mini
  • Mephisto Modena
  • Mephisto Monaco
  • Mephisto Mondial
  • Mephisto Mondial II
  • Mephisto Mondial 68000XL
  • Mephisto Montana
  • Mephisto Monte Carlo
  • Mephisto Monte Carlo IV
  • Mephisto Monte Carlo IV LE
  • Mephisto Montreal 68000
  • Mephisto Montreux (Johan de Koning)
  • Mephisto Mystery
  • Mephisto Mythos
  • Mephisto Nigel Short
  • Mephisto PC Schachbrett (Electronic chess board connected to a PC)
  • Mephisto Phantom
  • Mephisto Schachakademie
  • Mephisto Schachschule
  • Mephisto Schachschule II
  • Mephisto Super Mondial
  • Mephisto Super Mondial II
  • Mephisto Supermini
  • Mephisto Talking Chess Trainer
  • Mephisto Talking Chess Academy
  • Mephisto Travel Chess
  • Russian made chess computer ″ШК-1″ (ShK-1 for ″shakhmatniy kompyuter″ – Chess Computer) using 'Mephisto H&G OEM chip'[1]

See also[edit]

Fidelity electronics mini sensory chess challenger

References[edit]

Challenger

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mephisto (Chess computer).
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mephisto_(chess_computer)&oldid=992555747'

Home * Engines * Chess Challenger

Sensory Chess Challenger, 1982, 6502[1]

Chess Challenger, or Fidelity Chess Challenger,
was a series of dedicated chess computers produced and market by Fidelity Electronics. The Chess Challenger 1 was the first commercial chess computer of its kind in 1976, invented by Sidney Samole, with a program by Ron Nelson, developed for an Altair 8800 Microcomputer with an Intel8080 CPU. Further versions of Nelson's program run on a more advanced Z80 CPU, great commercial success was the Chess Challenger 7[2] in 1979. Ed English, an early game programmer affiliated with Fidelity Electronics in 1979/80, improved the alpha-beta implementation to double the playing speed [3].

Challenger
  • 2Sargon becomes Challenger
  • 4Chess Challenger X
  • 7Publications
  • 8Forum Posts
  • 9External Links
Mini sensory chess challenger

Chess Challenger Prototype, 1976, 8080[4] .

In 1980, when Dan and Kathe Spracklen started to collaborate with Samole, a 6502 Version of Chess Challenger was built for a Sargon III port. The 6502 was better suited for Sargon than Z80. Excerpt from their oral history how it went with Fidelity [5] :

WMCCC 1980, MCC 1980

The immediate success was the lucky win of the 1st World Microcomputer Chess Championship, September 4 to 9, 1980, in London. Chess Challenger with a 6502 CPU, notably winning last three of five rounds against three of four other Sargon incarnations! While the ICGA tournament site states a Z80A CPU [6], Kevin O'Connell reported the World Microcomputer Chess Champion was equipped with a MOS Technology processor, despite newest Fidelity computers were shipped with Z80/Z80A [7]. As further confirmed by Fidelity Electronics' Vice President Myron Samole in an Personal Computing interview, the Champion Sensory Challenger, which also won the MCC 1980 at September 5 to 7 in San Jose, California had a program written around the 6502 chip [8].

German Chess Challenger brochure with Prof. Heinz Haber endorsement [9]
Chess Challenger Sensory Voice[10], a Z80 based Nelson Program as Micro Champ? [11]

WCCC 1980

The Chess Challenger which played the WCCC 1980 end of September in Linz and finished last was presumably an older Z80 based computer with a Nelson program [12]. Fidelity's flagship end of the 70s, with World Champion 1980 advertisement was the Chess Challenger Sensory Voice. The first 6502 based computer with a Spracklen program commercially available appeared in 1981 as Champion Sensory Chess Challenger[13] .

ACM 1980

The strong third place at the ACM 1980 in October was again a great success, only losing to Belle in the last round [14]. Description given from the ACM booklet with mentioned authors Dan and Kathe Spracklen, Ronald Nelson, Frank Duason[15]

Mini Sensory Chess Challenger

This marks the first appearance in an ACM tournament for this popular machine. Chess Challenger is written in assembly language for a 6502 microprocessor. It has 20k bytes of memory and executes about 1,000,000 inst/sec. A book of about 1,000 moves is used. The program uses the alpha-beta algorithm with iterative deepening.

Mini Sensory Chess Challenger

References[edit]

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mephisto (Chess computer).
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mephisto_(chess_computer)&oldid=992555747'

Home * Engines * Chess Challenger

Sensory Chess Challenger, 1982, 6502[1]

Chess Challenger, or Fidelity Chess Challenger,
was a series of dedicated chess computers produced and market by Fidelity Electronics. The Chess Challenger 1 was the first commercial chess computer of its kind in 1976, invented by Sidney Samole, with a program by Ron Nelson, developed for an Altair 8800 Microcomputer with an Intel8080 CPU. Further versions of Nelson's program run on a more advanced Z80 CPU, great commercial success was the Chess Challenger 7[2] in 1979. Ed English, an early game programmer affiliated with Fidelity Electronics in 1979/80, improved the alpha-beta implementation to double the playing speed [3].

  • 2Sargon becomes Challenger
  • 4Chess Challenger X
  • 7Publications
  • 8Forum Posts
  • 9External Links

Chess Challenger Prototype, 1976, 8080[4] .

In 1980, when Dan and Kathe Spracklen started to collaborate with Samole, a 6502 Version of Chess Challenger was built for a Sargon III port. The 6502 was better suited for Sargon than Z80. Excerpt from their oral history how it went with Fidelity [5] :

WMCCC 1980, MCC 1980

The immediate success was the lucky win of the 1st World Microcomputer Chess Championship, September 4 to 9, 1980, in London. Chess Challenger with a 6502 CPU, notably winning last three of five rounds against three of four other Sargon incarnations! While the ICGA tournament site states a Z80A CPU [6], Kevin O'Connell reported the World Microcomputer Chess Champion was equipped with a MOS Technology processor, despite newest Fidelity computers were shipped with Z80/Z80A [7]. As further confirmed by Fidelity Electronics' Vice President Myron Samole in an Personal Computing interview, the Champion Sensory Challenger, which also won the MCC 1980 at September 5 to 7 in San Jose, California had a program written around the 6502 chip [8].

German Chess Challenger brochure with Prof. Heinz Haber endorsement [9]
Chess Challenger Sensory Voice[10], a Z80 based Nelson Program as Micro Champ? [11]

WCCC 1980

The Chess Challenger which played the WCCC 1980 end of September in Linz and finished last was presumably an older Z80 based computer with a Nelson program [12]. Fidelity's flagship end of the 70s, with World Champion 1980 advertisement was the Chess Challenger Sensory Voice. The first 6502 based computer with a Spracklen program commercially available appeared in 1981 as Champion Sensory Chess Challenger[13] .

ACM 1980

The strong third place at the ACM 1980 in October was again a great success, only losing to Belle in the last round [14]. Description given from the ACM booklet with mentioned authors Dan and Kathe Spracklen, Ronald Nelson, Frank Duason[15]

Mini Sensory Chess Challenger

This marks the first appearance in an ACM tournament for this popular machine. Chess Challenger is written in assembly language for a 6502 microprocessor. It has 20k bytes of memory and executes about 1,000,000 inst/sec. A book of about 1,000 moves is used. The program uses the alpha-beta algorithm with iterative deepening.

Using the same name at almost the same time for programs with different authors and CPU architectures caused some confusion by potential customers, not to mention tournament organizers. Accordant to their product lineup and nomination, and caused by former tournament rules, permitting multiple, but different named entries from the same author, and commercial availability of participating computers, Fidelity Electronics somehow was 'forced' to continue the naming obfuscation in further tournaments, where Fidelity computers with Spracklen programs participated as Fidelity X, Challenger-X, Elegance, Elite, Private Line, and Sensory.

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ACM 1986

In 1986, at the 17th ACM North American Computer Chess Championship, Fidelity showed up with a huge experimental, parallel machine, named Chess Challenger X. Authors were Ron Nelson, Dan Spracklen, Kathe Spracklen, and Danny Kopec as Book author. It had a Z80 controller, and 16 or more 68000 16-bit processors. The controller was written in C, the 16 or more Spracklen programs in assembler[16].

Chess Challenger X scored 50%, losing from Recom and Belle. Notably, in the same tournament, another Fidelity computer programmed by the Spracklens with a Kopec book took part, as Fidelity Experimental with a 68020 processor. It did not score better in that strong field and finally placed 10th.

ACM 1988

At the ACM 1988, the new experimental version of a 68030 based micro called Chess Challenger X showed a remarkable performance. Mentioned authors from the tournament report by Monty Newborn and Danny Kopec[17] were Dan and Kathe Spracklen as well as Ron Nelson. The 32-bit program, written in 68030 assembly language, drew Deep Thought and won versus Waycool, the current World Champion Cray Blitz, and HiTech. Chess Challenger X was likely the forerunner of the commercial available Fidelity Elite Avant Garde V9[18] . One year later, at the WCCC 1989 in Edmonton, a similar machine, presumably with a further developed program, played under the name Fidelity X and finished sixth.

1978 ..

  • Editor (1978). Black-box war. Personal Computing, Vol. 2, No. 11, pp. 17, November 1978 » Boris
  • Don Gerue, Russ McNeil (1979). Chess Challenger-10 wins Microchess Tourney. Personal Computing, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 63 » The Penrod Memorial Microchess Tournament
  • John Larkins (1979). Inside Chess Challenger. Personal Computing, Vol. 3, No. 11, pp. 78
  • Editor (1979). Misadvantages of a Chess Traveler. Personal Computing, Vol. 3, No. 12, pp. 75

1980 ..

  • Sidney Samole (1980). Genius Offspring. Changing Times, refers Personal Computing, February 1979
  • Evan Katz (1980). Chess Challenger's Voice comes out of Both Sides of its Mouth. Personal Computing, Vol. 4, No. 5, pp. 80
  • Harry Shershow (1981). The MyChess-CSC Confrontation at San Jose. Personal Computing, Vol. 5, No. 1, pp. 79 » MCC 1980, Interviews with David Kittinger and Mike Samole
  • John F. White (1981). Survey-Chess Games. Your Computer, August/September 1981
  • John F. White (1982). Review-Morphy V Champion. Your Computer, January 1982
  • John F. White (1982). Review-Chess Computers. Your Computer, March 1982

2000 ..

Mini Sensory Chess Challenger Manual

  • Rob van Son (2002). De schaakcomputer daagt u uit!. Computerschaak, pdf hosted by Hein Veldhuis (Dutch)

1998 ..

  • Re: Old chess challenger 7 algorithms by Fernando Villegas, CCC, April 06, 1998
  • Something More About Chess Challenger 7 by Fernando Villegas, CCC, April 06, 1998
  • Fidelity Sensory Chess Challenger 8 by Jim Phillips, CCC, September 20, 1998
  • Fidelity Chess Challenger 7 by Joseph R. Coppola, CCC, January 21, 1999

2000 ..

  • Instruction Book For Fidelity Chess Challenger by John Burton, CCC, February 22, 2000
  • What was Chess Challenger 7 thinking? by Rich Van Gaasbeck, CCC, March 06, 2002
  • I Think I have Chess Challenger 7 search depths correctly now by Rich Van Gaasbeck, CCC, March 08, 2002
  • Fidelity Sensory Chess Challenger 8 by Eric Guttenberg, CCC, February 20, 2005
  • Chess Champion Sensory Challenger Asked by Fernando Villegas, CCC, March 06, 2006

2010 ..

Mini Sensory Chess Challenger

  • Fidelity World Champion Challenger by Larry, Hiarcs Forum, December 03, 2013
  • Ron Nelsons dedicated chess computers by mclane, Hiarcs Forum, April 26, 2015
  • Re: Ron Nelson by ChessChallenger, Hiarcs Forum, December 29, 2015
Re: Ron Nelson by Chessmaster Ireland, Hiarcs Forum, January 02, 2016
Re: Ron Nelson Chess Challenger 10 by ChessChallenger, Hiarcs Forum, January 24, 2016
  • Re: Ron Nelson maybe will come here.. by Ron Nelson, CCC, February 03, 2016
  • Fidelity Chess Challenger 3 Components by ChessChallenger, Hiarcs Forum, February 03, 2016
  • Fidelity Electronics from chesscomputers.org
  • Fidelity Champion Sensory Challenger Electronic Chess Computer from The Spacious Mind
  • Fidelity Chess Challenger 1 from Adam'sComputer Chess Pages, May 30, 2012
  • Fidelity from Schachcomputer.info Wiki (German)
  • Sargon immer noch Marktführer:: Mikros noch ohne Großmeister-Format, Computerwoche, November 28, 1980 (German) » WCCC 1980, WMCCC 1980

Chess Challenger Voices

hosted by Tom Luif

Editions

Year Product Link(s) [19][20] Author(s) Processor Tournaments
1977Fidelity Chess Challenger 1
Fidelity Chess Challenger (CC1)
Fidelity Chess Challenger 1
Ron Nelson8080
Fidelity Chess Challenger 3
Chess Challenger 3, CC1 vs CC3
Ron Nelson8080, 2 MHz
1978Fidelity Chess Challenger 10Ron NelsonZ80, 4 MHz
1979Fidelity Chess Challenger 7Ron NelsonZ80
Fidelity Chess Challenger VoiceRon NelsonZ80, 4 MHz
1980Fidelity Voice Sensory Chess ChallengerRon NelsonZ80, 4 MHz
Fidelity Decorator ChallengerRon NelsonZ80, 4 MHz
1981Fidelity Chess Challenger Mini SensoryRon Nelson80C50, 6 MHz
Fidelity Champion Sensory Chess ChallengerDan and Kathe Spracklen6502, 2 MHzWMCCC 1980, 1st
1982Fidelity Super 9 Sensory Chess Challenger
Fidelity Super 9
Dan and Kathe Spracklen6502, 2 MHz
Fidelity USCF Special Edition
Fidelity USCF Special Edition
Dan and Kathe Spracklen6502, 2.5 MHz
1986 Chess Challenger XDan and Kathe Spracklen
Ron Nelson, Danny Kopec
Z80, 16 x 68000ACM 1986, 7th
1988 Chess Challenger XDan and Kathe Spracklen
Ron Nelson
68030ACM 1988, 2nd
  1. Sensory Chess Challenger, 1982 from The Computer History Museum
  2. Chess Challenger 7 from Schachcomputer.info Wiki (German)
  3. Ed English | LinkedIn
  4. Chess Challenger Prototype from World Chess Hall of Fame and Sidney Samole Chess Museum, see Sidney Samole and Fidelity Electronics from chesscomputers.org
  5. Gardner Hendrie (2005). Oral History of Kathe and Dan Spracklen. pdf from The Computer History Museum
  6. 1st World Microcomputer Chess Championship - ICGA Tournaments
  7. Kevin O'Connell (1980). World Microcomputer Chess Championship. Personal Computer World, November 1980
  8. Harry Shershow (1981). The MyChess-CSC Confrontation at San Jose. Personal Computing, Vol. 5, No. 1, pp. 79-81
  9. Grand Master Voice 1980 Brochure | Flickr - Fotosharing by Chewbanta
  10. Fidelity Chess Challenger Voice from Schachcomputer.info Wiki (German)
  11. Fidelity CC Sencory Voice was a Z80 based Nelson program, and not the 6502 based Spracklen program which won the WMCCC 1980
  12. Sargon immer noch Marktführer:: Mikros noch ohne Großmeister-Format, Computerwoche, November 28, 1980 (German)
  13. Fidelity CC Champion from Schachcomputer.info Wiki (German)
  14. 'Belle' wurde auch US-Champion 1980: Frecher Schachzwerg beweist Kaltblütigkeit, January 23, 1981, Computerwoche 3/1981 (German)
  15. The Eleventh ACM's North American Computer Chess Championship, pdf from The Computer History Museum
  16. The ACM's Seventeenth North American Computer Chess Championship and The Sixth World Microcomputer Chess Championship from The Computer History Museum, pdf
  17. Monty Newborn and Danny Kopec (1989). Results of The Nineteenth ACM North American Computer Chess Championship, in The Twentieth ACM North American Computer Chess Championship from The Computer History Museum, pdf
  18. Fidelity Elite Avant Garde V9 from Schachcomputer.info Wiki (German)
  19. Fidelity from Schachcomputer.info Wiki (German)
  20. Chess Computer UK by Mike Watters
Retrieved from 'https://www.chessprogramming.org/index.php?title=Chess_Challenger&oldid=16479'




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