At this page lot of informations about the Intelligent Chess Software Ltd. With few other photos and names, someone of them also worked on the Enterprise?
Thanks for posting that - lots of pictures of faces I once knew!
David Levy and Kevin O'Connell you of course know of. David Levy had a big input to the "expertise" of the chess programs but was not actually a programmer. Kevin O'Connell was also a chess expert but was more the businessman of IS I think.
Mark Taylor and Richard Lang appear in the Your Computer photo but didn't actually contribute to the Enterprise - I think they just came along to the pre-launch event for the free food! They kept the chess side of things going. The article suggests that resources were diverted from chess development to the Enterprise but that is not true - they employed more people to do the Enterprise work (eg me!)
But Mike Johnson who is mentioned a lot in that article is the same "Mike" who started writing BASIC in C - I couldn't remember his last name in my other post. I did not know him well and have only just learnt from reading that article that he was quite deeply connected with the computer chess world!
For the techies, one interesting item mentioned that I remember was Mark Taylor's chess program that ran on a 4-bit processor running at 400kHz, with only 2k x 10bits ROM and 160 nibbles (80 bytes) RAM. A truly impressive feat!