In 1989 Deep Thought was the first computer to become Chess International Great Master, even defeating David Levy in an exhibition match; in 1997 Deep Blue, developed by IBM, defeated the world chess champion Garry Kasparov, becoming the first computer to defeat a man in a match play, even documented in the documentary movie “Game Over
But as the game wore on, his anti-computer playing was lethal. Kasparov wiped Deep Blue off the board. Kasparov pinned Deep Blue’s king between his knight and his rook, and on the 45th move, the computer resigned. The robot lost. In fact, Deep Blue played so poorly that it seemed it was going haywire.
But it was not a contest between the two strongest chess players on the planet, only the strongest humans. Soon after I lost my rematch against IBM's Deep Blue in 1997, the short window of human-machine chess competition slammed shut forever. Unlike humans, machines keep getting faster, and today a smartphone chess app can be stronger than Deep
Game Over: Kasparov and the Machine. In 1997, chess champion Garry Kasparov goes head-to-head against IBM's computer, Deep Blue, and accuses IBM of cheating its way to victory. Interviews with Kasparov, his manager and members of the Deep Blue team illuminate the controversy. 78 1 h 24 min 2004. X-Ray PG.
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