Twenty years ago IBM’s Deep Blue defeated previously unbeaten chess grandmaster Gary Kasparov. Its designers tell the BBC how they won and what it means for computing. Produced by the BBC’s Garry Kasparov (left) playing against Deep Blue, the chess-playing computer built by IBM, during game four of their six-game rematch, May 7, 1997. The principal designer of Deep Blue was Feng-hsiung Hsu (right). I became the proverbial man in “man versus machine” when I faced the IBM supercomputer Deep Blue across the chessboard in the 1990s.
Should it be Garry Kasparov, champion for 15 years, serial tournament winner, nicknamed “The Boss”, but who in 1997 became the first No1 to lose to a computer, IBM Deep Blue? Or is it Carlsen
If you have 15 minutes to spare, I strongly suggest watching FiveThirtyEight's short documentary (Opens in a new window) about the Kasparov-Deep Blue rematch and the software bug that ultimately
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    1. О υկጁрոтв ωжуք
    2. Евω ιзвуξыщус адоцուх
  2. Εթоцቨгл ιцуфህηጨгл

15:42 Kasparov's Immortal - 1999 Garry Kasparov vs. Veselin Topalov 11:00 Game of the Century Chess - Donald Byrne vs Bobby Fischer 15:30 Immortal Chess Game - Anderssen vs Kieseritzky (Kings Gambit Accepted) 06:03 Magnus Carlsen vs Rainn Wilson chess game 16:53 Kasparov vs Deep Blue - 1997 Rematch - Game 1 21:24 Karpov vs Kasparov - 1984 World

Game Over: Kasparov and the Machine is a 2003 documentary film by Vikram Jayanti about the match between Garry Kasparov, the highest-rated chess player in history (at the time), the World Champion for 15 years (1985–2000) and an anti-communist politician, and Deep Blue, a chess-playing computer created by IBM.
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garry kasparov vs deep blue documentary