1 DEEP BLUE vs GARRY KASPAROV. New York, 1997. 19 moves. Win: Deep Blue. Garry Kasparov, undisputed world champion from 1985 to 1993, became the first champion to lose a match to a computer. In After Anatoly Karpov came Garry Kasparov, the 13th world champion.Kasparov took opening preparation to possibly the most extreme level of any champions before or since. His deep explorations, with the help of a team of grandmasters and -- a new phenomenon at the time -- computers, were a consequence of the much higher level of professionalism of ch Kasparov will play six games against Deep Blue in a re-match of their first contest in 1996. Chess grandmaster Garry Kasparov, who lost to IBM's Deep Blue computer in 1997, predicts that AI will # Support GJ_Chess:- http://www.paypal.me/GJChess# Website:- http://www.gjchess.com# FACEBOOK :- http://www.facebook IBM's Deep Blue (White) plays against World Champion Garry Kasparov (Black). This match, and particularly this game, made chess and computer history. Deep Blue - Kasparov, Game 1 of 1996 Match | Chess Lessons - Chess.com . In a series of matches in 1996 and 1997, Kasparov took on a Deep Blue, a supercomputer running in massive parallel, allowing it to brute-force through possible chess moves quickly enough to allow Garry Kasparov is a Soviet-born chess master who became the world chess champion in 1985. Kasparov was the youngest world chess champion (at 22 years of age), and he is also known for his matches against a computer known as Deep Blue in 1996 and 1997. Kasparov had battled Deep Blue at least eleven times prior to this match (six times in 1996 and five uptil then in 1997) and had managed to win convincingly against it, albeit with some losses - but this had not deterred him before. Which is why it is all the more surprising Kasparov gave up at this exact point in the game. IBM's Deep Blue (White) plays against World Champion Garry Kasparov (Black). This match, and particularly this game, made chess and computer history. Deep Blue - Kasparov, Game 1 of 1996 Match | Chess Lessons - Chess.com 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

garry kasparov vs deep blue