GNU Go

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http://www.gnu.org/software/gnugo/logo-36.jpg

GNU Go is a [ext] free go-playing program (under the [ext] GNU GPL). It compiles on many platforms, including GNU/Linux, Unix, Windows and Mac OS (both classic and Mac OS X).

A graphical go client is not included. To play against GNU Go on your computer you should therefore also install a GUI capable of running GNU Go. Alternatively you could use the text-based ASCII or the [ext] GNU Emacs user interface.

The latest stable release is [ext] GNU GO 3.8, released in February 2009.

The latest development release is [ext] <> (link at the bottom), released in <>.


Table of contents


URLs


Builds


GUIs capable of running GNU Go

  • qGo Windows / Linux / OSX. Also an IGS client
  • glGo
  • gGo
  • jago (Java)
  • cgoban1 (X Window-System)
  • drago. Has an autohandicap mode and can give score estimate at any time.
  • gogui (Java) Useful for a lot of experimentation with GNU Go via the GTP shell (but supports simple playing, too)
  • Emacs interface links: [ext] emacswiki
  • Sente Goban (Very nice Mac Os X client for GNU Go / IGS) [ext] goban
  • MultiGo
  • SmartGo Play against GNU Go; supports Tourney between SmartGo and GNU Go or other GTP-enabled programs.
  • [ext] ccGo. Also an IGS client.
  • Quarry (GNU/Linux, GTK+-based).
  • Go Widget. Dashboard widget for Mac OSX. Play against GNU Go on a 9x9 board. [ext] Go Widget
  • [ext] wap-go.com. HTML-frontend to GTP-capable programs. Optimized to save traffic, allows to play against GNU Go from mobilephone or PDA using html-browser.

GNU Go at go servers

The easiest way to play against GNU Go is to log on to one of the go servers below and challenge one of the many GNU Go bots.


History

  • 2009-February: GNU Go 3.8 released
  • 2008-December: GNU Go 3.8 announced
  • 2008-December: GNU Go 3.7.13 development version released
  • 2008-April: GNU Go 3.7.12 development version released.
  • 2007-Nov: GNU Go 3.7.11 development version released.
  • 2006-May: GNU Go 3.7.10 development version released.
    • 2006-May: GNU Go 3.7.10 wins the 2006 Computer Olympiad.
    • 2006-Oct: GNU Go 3.7.10 takes second in the 2006 Gifu Challenge behind KCC Igo.
    • 2008-Aug: GNU Go 3.7.10 takes first at the 2008 North American Computer Go Championship
  • 2004-Nov: GNU Go 3.6 released. Somewhat stronger than 3.4, and probably of comparable speed (though perhaps slightly slower). At KGS GNU Go 3.6 based bots are usually rated at 12k or 13k.
  • 2002-Apr: GNU Go 3.2 released. About three handicap stones stronger than 3.0, uses less RAM, and about as fast. [ext] At KGS its rated at 13k.
  • 2000-Feb: GNU Go 2.6 released. [ext] At KGS its rated at 17k. My guess is that if 2.6 and 2.4 were playing against opponents that knew well their weakness, 2.6 would be rated higher.
  • 1999-Apr: GNU Go 2.0 released. [ext] At KGS its rated at 18k. This can probably give more than 9 stones to Liberty 1.0, but against humans difference compared to Liberty 1.0 is just 6 stones.
  • 1999-Jan: Liberty 1.0 released (based on date on files). This could be considered a version between GNU Go 1.2 and GNU Go 2.0. [ext] At KGS its rated at 24k.

(All the relative strength differences above are with respect to self-play at default level settings; in games against humans with fixed time settings, the differences may be considerable smaller.)


Developers

GnuGo Development
GTP


Go playing Programs
Computer Go Programming´

Gnugo nosekis patterns with horrible results that gnugo frequently plays


This is a copy of the living page "GNU Go" at Sensei's Library.
(OC) 2009 the Authors, published under the OpenContent License V1.0.
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