"the illusory image Chinese chess" could be the re-translation of Phantom Go.
On the page, it listed Go (could be 19x19), 9x9 Go and Phantom Go. And 5 other games including Chinese Chess. The winner of the Go is the LINGO team. On Thu, Nov 18, 2010 at 2:17 PM, Nick Wedd <[email protected]> wrote: > In message <[email protected]>, > Fuming Wang <[email protected]> writes > > Here is a link that has information about the competition event we >> participated. It is in Chinese, but has a few pictures. >> http://caai.cn/contents/15/2335.html >> > > I can't read Chinese, and Babelfish isn't much help, it talks about > "the illusory image Chinese chess". So can you please explain, did this > event include 19x19 Go, and if it did, who won? Also 13x13. > > Thank you for posting the 9x9 results. > > Nick > > > Fuming >> >> On Tue, Nov 9, 2010 at 8:42 PM, Fuming Wang <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> >> Our FPGA implementation of 9x9 Go, XMU-FPGA, had just participated a >> national Computer games competition event in Beijing, China. There >> are 6 participant in 9x9 Go category, with one of them quite strong >> (Lingo), while 3 others with reasonable strengths,including XMU-FPGA >> (about as strong as gnu go 3.8). XMU-FPGA did quite well, and >> finished second place after Lingo. Details of our FPGA >> implementation has been published at a recent conference, and people >> interested can send me email in private for a copy of the paper. >> >> Best regards, >> >> Fuming Wang >> _______________________________________________ >> Computer-go mailing list >> [email protected] >> http://dvandva.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/computer-go >> > > -- > Nick Wedd [email protected] > > _______________________________________________ > Computer-go mailing list > [email protected] > http://dvandva.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/computer-go >
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