On Thu, Nov 8, 2018, 1:23 PM Doug McIlroy <doug@cs.dartmouth.edu wrote:
Peter Adams, who photographed many Unix folks for his
"Faces of open source" series (http://facesofopensource.com/),
found trinkets from the Unix lab in the Bell Labs archives:
http://www.peteradamsphoto.com/unix-folklore/.

One item is more than a trinket. Belle, built by
Ken Thompson and Joe Condon, won the world computer
chess championship in 1980 and became the first
machine to gain a chess master rating. Physically,
it's about a two-foot cube.

Doug

Furthermore, Feng-hsiung Hsu at CMU essentially put Belle on a chip and parallelized it, resulting in the chess computer Deep Thought -- which became the first machine to defeat a human Grandmaster. It lost a historic match against the world champion Garry Kasparov, but its successor, Deep Blue, went on to defeat him.

My favorite anecdote that I've read regarding Belle was when Ken Thompson took it out of the country for a competition. Someone, I'm assuming with customs, asked him if Belle could be classified as munitions in any way. He replied, "Only if you drop it out the window."