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Garry Kasparov lost the first game of a six-game match on February 10, 1996, against Deep Blue, an IBM computer capable of evaluating 200 million moves per second. CHESS GRANDMASTER ALLEGEDLY ...
Former world chess champion Garry Kasparov announced this week that he will play his first public match against a computer since his stunning loss to IBM's Deep Blue machine five years ago.
Gary Kasparov in a chess rematch against Deep Blue, an IBM computer. Kasparov, playing black, used a standard defense known as the “Caro-Kann,” forcing white to sacrifice a piece.
Chess Grand Master Garry Kasparov, left, comtemplates his next move against IBM's Deep Blue chess computer while Chung-Jen Tan, manager of the Deep Blue project looks on during the first game of a ...
After five years of licking his Deep Blue wounds, Garry Kasparov will face a widely admired--and feared--computer chess master. The match, to be held Oct. 1-13 in Jerusalem, will pit Kasparov ...
Garry Kasparov wasn't too impressed with Magnus Carlsen's conduct and lauded ‘comptuer-like’ Gukesh for his win against the ...
In 1997, Deep Blue, a computer designed by IBM, took on the undefeated world chess champion, Garry Kasparov. Kasparov lost. Some argued that computers had progressed to be "smarter" than humans.
NEW YORK - World number one chess player Garry Kasparov crushed the champion computer program Deep Junior in his trademark aggressive style Sunday in the first game of their six-game "Man vs ...
It's man vs. machine again, this time with the world's best chess player Garry Kasparov up against the official world computer chess champion, Deep Junior. The match began January 26th and through ...
Before the start of the tournament, Carlsen had questioned Gukesh's credentials in rapid and blitz by saying that he would ...
In this February 13, 1996 photo, Garry Kasparov ponders his move against IBM's chess-playing computer, Deep Blue. The picture was taken during the third game between them at the Convention Center ...
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