![]() Prior to the World Championship, there was quite some discussion about a change of the rules, which first limited the hardware to one computer with maximum 8 logical cores and was later modified to allow small clusters with max. This year's World Computer Chess Championship was held together with the 14th Computer Olympiad. It's not clear yet when a cluster version of Rybka will be made public, but it works quite well as you may have seen already in the games from Beijing. The main difference to Rybka 3 was (besides improved playing strength) the cluster support, i.e. So the Rybka version used in Pamplona was a private development version. Of course Rybka is improving constantly, as Vasik Rajlich is working on the engine full time. ![]() You can click on most of the pictures to see a larger version. Then the highlight of this report is following, Hans' diary from Pamplona with a lot of pictures and videos. ![]() I will start this report by giving a short introduction to our team and the tournament, so that you can get an idea how many people were contributing to Rybka's success. Report from the 17th World Computer Chess ChampionshipĪnd the 14th Computer Olympiad in Pamplona ![]()
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