mephisto wrote:Together with a couple of computer chess friends, we have built a dedicated chess computer with the Raspberry Pi and a Teensy USB Development Board.
The chess engine we use is Stockfish and the Teensy software is called
'Sish'.
Putting all this together we have named our chess computer,
'SishFishPi'
Feeling Hungry Regards
Bryan
I was hit by a strong wave of dizziness after reading the name
SishFishPi with Syzygy. Now pronounce it while eating a cookie.
FriedmannC wrote:It would be more appropriate to rename it into THOR or Mjölnir, just like in the Scandinavian mythology, it hit Houdini too hard lately It would sound better: Deep Thor Of course there are many options. BEST regards!
Simply call it Quad-Core-Engine or CPU-Engine:
Comparing 1997 Deep Blue to today Quad-Core Machine: According to James Abbott, associate director of the computing center, Deep Blue was an 11.38 gigaflop computer, meaning it could handle about 11 billion operations a second. But an ordinary server with 16 processing cores do around 260 billion operations a second. The additional speed and processing power allows modern chess algorithms to more quickly and efficiently analyze possible moves. But, of course, the goal is to go further. More power, more speed, more depth.
mephisto wrote:Together with a couple of computer chess friends, we have built a dedicated chess computer with the Raspberry Pi and a Teensy USB Development Board.
The chess engine we use is Stockfish and the Teensy software is called
'Sish'.
Putting all this together we have named our chess computer,
'SishFishPi'
Feeling Hungry Regards
Bryan
I was hit by a strong wave of dizziness after reading the name
SishFishPi with Syzygy. Now pronounce it while eating a cookie.
Miguel
Yeah sure and then I'll have to go through a bronchoscopy procedure to extract the cookie from my lungs
_No one can hit as hard as life.But it ain’t about how hard you can hit.It’s about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward.How much you can take and keep moving forward….