IBM then roped in another programmer, Arthur Joseph Hoane, and their long-time employee, Jerry Brody, to join the team. Thomas Anantharaman joined the company sometime later, but, after a short stint, left IBM to go work on Wall Street. The project caught the attention of IBM and, after Feng-hsiung Hsu and Murray Campbell graduated, the company hired them to develop the Deep Thought project further. From this computer came a more improved version, Deep Thought. In 1985, three computer science students at Carnegie Mellon University, Feng-hsiung Hsu, Thomas Anantharaman and Murray Campbell, built the chess-playing computer ChipTest. An identical version of the Deep Blue at Computer History Museum, California.
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