World chess champion Garry Kasparov loses game to computer. On February 10, 1996, after three hours, world chess champion Garry Kasparov loses the first game of a six-game match against Deep Blue
Deep Thinking: Where Machine Intelligence Ends and Human Creativity Begins. Hardcover – May 2, 2017. by Garry Kasparov (Author), Mig Greengard. 4.4 985 ratings. Editors' pick Best Nonfiction. See all formats and editions. Garry Kasparov's 1997 chess match against the IBM supercomputer Deep Blue was a watershed moment in the history of technology.
5.2K 1M views 16 years ago Short documentary about computer chess history up to the third millennium and especially about the 1997 chess match between Garry Kasparov World Chess Champion and
Deep Blue (chess computer) Deep Blue was a chess-playing expert system run on a unique purpose-built IBM supercomputer. It was the first computer to win a game, and the first to win a match, against a reigning world champion under regular time controls. Development began in 1985 at Carnegie Mellon University under the name ChipTest.
Kasparov vs. Deep Blue: The Rematch - overview. How it all went down between human and machine. In May 1997, IBM's Deep Blue Supercomputer played a fascinating match with Garry Kasparov, the reigning World Chess Champion. The event was captured live only on an IBM website, where millions of chess and computing fans witnessed the event in real-time.
VIRALCHESS.COM presents: Kasparov vs. Deep Blue, 1997 (#6 of 6): IBM Deep Blue vs. Garry KasparovFor more Youtube videos like this check out our website:
Garry Kasparov (born April 13, 1963, Baku, Azerbaijan, U.S.S.R. [now Baku, Azerbaijan]) Soviet-born chess master who became the world chess champion in 1985. Kasparov was the youngest world chess champion (at 22 years of age) and the first world chess champion to be defeated by a supercomputer in a competitive match.
Kasparov versus Deep Blue. Main article: Kasparov versus Deep Blue 1996. Deep Blue was the first machine to win a chess game against a reigning world champion Garry Kasparov under regular time controls. This first win occurred on February 10, 1996, Game 1. However, Kasparov won three games and drew two of the following games, beating Deep Blue
Deep Blue was capable of calculating up to 200 million positions per second. Kasparov and Deep Blue met again a year later, when the super computer defeated the chess champion in a full match. Many observers worried about a machine’s intellectual defeat of a human being, while others were encouraged by the result.
Abstract. In February 1996, a chess-playing computer known as Deep Blue made history by defeating the reigning world chess champion, Gary Kasparov, in a game played under match conditions. Kasparov went on to win the six-game match 4-2 and at the end of the match announced that he believed that chess computing had come of age.
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