Fabien Letouzey

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Fabien Letouzey [1] Fabien Letouzey,

a French computer chess and games programmer and developer of the chess programs Fruit [2], Chess-64 [3] and Senpai, the Othello programs Turtle, Snail [4], Piloth [5], Decapus (10x10) and Octopus (8x8), the latter Gold medal winners at the 20th Computer Olympiad, Leiden 2017, the UCI- Winboard adapter PolyGlot, and the International Draughts programs Toy [6], and Scan, which surprised the Draughts scene in winning the 18th Computer Olympiad, Leiden 2015, and defended its title in 2016 and 2017 respectively. Fabien further works with Rémi Coulom to improve his Go playing program Crazy Stone due to deep learning [7].

Fruit

The release of Fruit until version 2.1 under GNU General Public License was a “revolution” in computer chess in 2005 - an open source program was “suddenly” competitive with the long time leading programs Shredder and Junior, as demonstrated at the WCCC 2005, where Fruit became runner up behind Zappa. After the great success of Reykjavik, and Fabien Letouzey met his professional colleagues, he decided to close the source and to go commercial - short after Fruit derivate appeared, based on the source code of Fruit 2.1, most notably Toga [8] by Thomas Gaksch. Fabien finished his commercial computer chess career so far in 2007 [9]. Fruit 2.3+ is non GPL with full rights given to Ryan Benitez, while Fruit 2.1 is now owned by the Free Software Foundation [10].

Anniversary

In March 2014, ten years after the initial Fruit 1.0 release, Fabien announced and published his new open source engine Senpai [11], and an independent fork of Fruit 2.1, Fruit Reloaded by Fabien Letouzey, Daniel Mehrmann and Ryan Benitez [12], both hosted by Steve Maughan’s Computer Chess Programming [13] [14].

Photos

Fruit

Winners 2005, Stefan Meyer-Kahlen, Fabien Letouzey, Anthony Cozzie and Gian-Carlo Pascutto

Scan

[15] [16]

10 years later, Fabien’s program Scan won 10x10 Draughts at the 18th Computer Olympiad [17] [18]

and defended its title at the 19th and 20th Computer Olympiad so far

Selected Publications

[19]

1999

2000 …

2010 …

Forum Posts

2000 …

2005 …

2010 …

2015 …

References

  1. Photos WCCC 2005 by Gerd Isenberg
  2. Fruit Chess Engine by Fabien Letouzey
  3. Re: Congratulations to Anthony ! by Ryan Benitez, CCC, September 27, 2007
  4. Programmes d’Othello® et de Reversi pour Linux
  5. Fabien Letouzey, othello programmer of Snail, Turtle and Piloth.
  6. Toy by Fabien Letouzey from All 10x10 programs in the world
  7. Behind the scenes of Fine Art with report on Computer Go UEC Cup, March 2017 @ 9:00
  8. Toga II by Thomas Gaksch and Fabien Letouzey
  9. Fruit - pure playing strength
  10. Re: When will come a new Toga Engine? by Ryan Benitez from CCC, April 10, 2009
  11. Senpai 1.0 (new engine) by Fabien Letouzey, CCC, March 17, 2014
  12. Fruit 1.0 anniversary by Fabien Letouzey, CCC, March 17, 2014
  13. Senpai Chess Engine - Computer Chess Programming hosted by Steve Maughan
  14. Fruit Reloaded - Computer Chess Programming hosted by Steve Maughan
  15. Draughts at the ICGA Olympiad by Harm Geert Muller, CCC, April 30, 2015
  16. Computer Olympiad 2015 Leiden by Bert Tuyt, World Draughts Forum, May 01, 2015
  17. Image from the 18th Computer Olympiad, 2015 by Gerd Isenberg
  18. Harm Jetten’s draughts program - Performance
  19. François DENIS Pulications
  20. The Chess Mind Blog - More Computer Chess Controversy
  21. Interview with Fabien (from the year 2005) … by Frank Quisinsky, CCC, January 25, 2011

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