1996 Game 1, Deep Blue vs. Kasparov. The first game of the 1996 match was the first game to be won by a chess-playing computer against a reigning world champion under normal chess tournament conditions, and in particular, normal time controls. The game was played on February 10, 1996.
On May 11, 1997, Deep Blue came out on top with a surprising sixth game win–and the $700,000 match prize. In 2003, Kasparov battled another computer program, “Deep Junior.” The match ended
Kasparov first produced the Scotch in the 14th game of his last (1990) world championship match with Karpov. This game shows a very common and important theme of the above position: if Black attacks e5 in straightforward fashion, White can simply sacrifice the pawn to keep the e-file closed and turn his attention elsewhere, specifically the Black's queenside castled king.
8/17/2004 – The Hollywood documentary "Game Over: Kasparov and the Machine", is being aired tonight on free-to-view BBC Four TV. It's a "gripping Storyvill film about world chess champion Gary Kasparov's controversial battles against IBM's Deep Blue computer". The broadcast is at 9pm British time, with a repeat at 11:50pm.
Kasparov had begun the final game of the match with an odd Carocan opening, a favorite of Kasparov’s arch-rival Anatoly Karpov, but something Kasparov would almost never use. He began to goad the computer to attack, hoping to force it into a tactical blunder, but the opposite occurred.
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Kasparov-- X3D match fought to a draw! With the weight of humanity on his shoulders, Garry Kasparov toiled over what he would play in the ultimate game of the 2nd "Man vs. Machine" match. Having eschewed more provocative defenses such as the King's Indian and the GrĂĽnfeld, Kasparov chose the "safe" Queen's Gambit accepted.
Jun 23, 2023, 5:29 AM | 1. Deep Blue versus Gary Kasparov is one of the most famous chess matches of all time, and it's widely considered a milestones moment not just in chess, but in the history of artificial intelligence (AI) as well. The match took place in 1996 and involved the IBM-built computer, Deep Blue, playing against world champion
Kasparov, Deep Blue play to a draw. May 6, 1997 Web posted at: 8:25 p.m. EDT. NEW YORK (CNN) -- Game 3 between world chess champion Garry Kasparov's and IBM's Deep Blue computer played to a draw
He said that IBM got a Russian speaking security to relay a conversation Kasparov had after a game with a coach. Considering IBM was willing to spy, it seems reasonable to suspect IBM spied on opening prep). Had the game been played a week earlier, Deep Blue would have fallen for Kasparov's dubious Caro Kann opening trap.
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