In this game we see both sides tied at 2-2 with only 2 games left. Kasparov playing the black pieces put on a great performance and allowed him to finish wi
This position occurred in the sixth game of the 1996 match between IBM's Deep Blue program and PCA World Champion Garry Kasparov. 6 Challenges. Kasparov - Deep Blue, Game 6 of 1996 Match (middlegame) This position continues game 6 of the 1996 match. White (Kasparov) is to make his 28th move. 3 Challenges.
Short documentary about computer chess history up to the third millennium and especially about the 1997 chess match between Garry Kasparov World Chess Champi
In 1996 the IBM supercomputer “Deep Blue” beat the reigning world champion Garry Kasparov at the game of chess. An event of symbolic significance. I created an artwork which shows the final position of the game, with special emphasis on the defeated human king. This post contains some photos and a making-of video. There is a Wikipedia article about the game.
Nearly two decades later, the match still fascinates. This week Time Magazine ran a story on the famous series of matches between IBM's supercomputer and Garry Kasparov. The subject was a few of the moves that stood out for a variety of reasons, such as a bug in game one of the 1997 match, and a move in game two that Kasparov found so unbelievable that he accused the Deep Blue team of cheating.
IBM's Deep Blue (White) plays against World Champion Garry Kasparov (Black). This match, and particularly this game, made chess and computer history.
From the reviews: "In 1997 … the chess machine Deep Blue defeated reigning World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov … . Monty Newborn, the author … has long been involved in computer chess and was instrumental in making possible the 1996 and 1997 matches between Deep Blue and Kasparov .
1996: The first chess game between a human champion and a computer takes place, with international grandmaster Garry Kasparov losing to IBM’s Deep Blue in Philadelphia. Had Kasparov gone on to
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deep blue vs kasparov 1996