NEW YORK - World number one chess player Garry Kasparov crushed the champion computer program Deep Junior in his trademark aggressive style Sunday in the first game of their six-game "Man vs Machine" ...
The deciding game Friday between chess legend Garry Kasparov and computer Deep Junior ended in a draw. The result meant that the six-game series pitting man against machine ended in a 3-3 deadlock.
Gary Kasparov flummoxed his computer opponent in the opening game of the latest chess match between man and machine. The revenge will be sweet for the former world chess champion whose reign was ...
"For several decades we have been training people to act like computers, and now we are complaining that these jobs are in danger." ...
The world’s greatest human chess player threw a tantrum and cried foul yesterday after being thrashed by a supercomputer. It took IBM’s Deep Blue just 19 moves to defeat world chess champion Garry ...
There was a time, not long ago, when computers—mere assemblages of silicon and wire and plastic that can fly planes, drive cars, translate languages, and keep failing hearts beating—could really, ...
Garry Kasparov, the World No. 1 chess player from Russia, makes his move against Deep Junior, the world computer chess champion. Amir Ban (right), Deep Blue's operator, physically makes the move when ...
After five years of licking his Deep Blue wounds, Garry Kasparov will face a widely admired--and feared--computer chess master. The match, to be held Oct. 1-13 in Jerusalem, will pit Kasparov against ...
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