🕹️ Garry Kasparov Vs Deep Blue
11. Well if wikipedia is accurate here are the specs for deep blue: 30 x RS/6000 SP Thin 120MHz P2SC-based system in a cluster. Each contained a special purpose VLSI chess chip. Running AIX. Processing performance was 11.38 GFLOPS & at the time was the 259th most powerful supercomputer. Ok, lets take a stab at it.
Português. Há mais de 20 anos atrás, o Campeão Mundial Garry Kasparov defrontou a IBM e o super-computador Deep Blue na derradeira batalha de homem versus máquina. Este foi um momento monumental na história do xadrez e foi acompanhada de perto no mundo inteiro. Este confronto foi fascinante para jogadores de xadrez, cientistas, peritos
In 1996 one of these computers lost a match to Garry Kasparov, then the World Chess Champion, winning one game, drawing in two, and losing three. A computer called Deep Blue won a 1997 rematch, winning two, drawing in three, and losing one. This was the culmination of 12 years of Hsu's life, 7 years of one of his coworkers', and 5 years of
Deep Blue versus Garry Kasparov was a pair of famous six-game human–computer chess matches, in the format… Read More Oct 2000 October 2000. Kasparov vs Kramnik
After 50 years of research and development in conjunction with artificial intelligence, the study of computer chess culminated during two matches between Deep Blue, a chess supercomputer funded by IBM, and the Chess World Champion Garry Kasparov. The 1996 and 1997 matches were media sensations, heavily promoted as a battle of wits between man
Deep Blue’s first major test occurred in February 1996, when it took on reigning champion Garry Kasparov in six games held in Philadelphia. Deep Blue won the first game, which marked the first victory by a computer against a reigning world champion under regular time controls. But Kasparov recovered and won the match 4–2.
You can read the original event description at the AI Summit Austin. “1997 witnessed a milestone in the age of artificial intelligence when IBM’s supercomputer, Deep Blue, beat the reigning world chess champion, Garry Kasparov, in a well-publicized rematch. It brought both AI and chess to the mainstream.
Garry Kasparov never beat Deep Blue again. He cranked out three consecutive draws with the computer, until a sound defeat in round six. The final score: 3 1⁄2 to 2 1⁄2, in favor of Deep Blue.
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garry kasparov vs deep blue