Deep Blue vs. Kasparov was a 1996 match between IBM super computer Deep Blue and then chess World Champion Garry Kasparov. Game 1 marked the first time a computer had defeated the World Champion at classical time controls (as opposed to shorter blitz or rapid games). The Russian’s 1996 and 1997 man vs machine matches against Deep Blue, an IBM RS/6000 supercomputer capable of crunching 200 million positions in the space of a second, wrote headlines around the From the reviews: "In 1997 … the chess machine Deep Blue defeated reigning World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov … . Monty Newborn, the author … has long been involved in computer chess and was instrumental in making possible the 1996 and 1997 matches between Deep Blue and Kasparov . Deep Blue is relatively very small. All such exam-ples of under-reporting seem to be motivated at least in part by the desire to keep a competitive edge over Kasparov. It would be scientifically far more pleas-ing for the Deep Blue team, for example, to have the match-ready version of Deep Blue generate hundreds 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) and the World Champion for 15 years (1985–2000), and Deep Blue, a chess-playing computer created by IBM. It was coproduced by Alliance Atlantis and the National Film El campeón mundial ruso Garri Kaspárov derrotó a la máquina con facilidad en 1989, así que la empresa tecnológica IBM compró el proyecto para mejorarlo.El resultado fue la supercomputadora Deep Blue, a la que Kaspárov volvería a enfrentarse en 1996 para demostrar que un algoritmo no podía ganar a la espontaneidad y la intuición del ser humano. In 1996 the IBM supercomputer “Deep Blue” beat the reigning world champion Garry Kasparov at the game of chess. An event of symbolic significance. I created an artwork which shows the final position of the game, with special emphasis on the defeated human king. This post contains some photos and a making-of video. There is a Wikipedia article about the game. Game Over: Directed by Vikram Jayanti. With Marc Ghannoum, Joel Benjamin, Michael Greengard, Anatoli Karpov. 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. Kasparov vs. Deep Blue 1996: A Look Back. Game 1: A Machine That's Got Moxie; In Upset, Computer Beats Chess Champion. Game 2: In Kasparov vs. Computer, the Chess Scorecard Is 1-1; Cautiously, Kasparov Outlasts the Computer. Game 3: Chess Match Remains Tied After a Draw. Game 4: Recovering From Crash, Chess Computer Gets a Draw. Game 5: In a sensational upset last May, Garry Kasparov, the world’s highest-rated human chess player was defeated by IBM’s Deep Blue running on an RS/6000 SP system by the score 31/2 to 21/2. Deep Blue, which can calculate 200 million positions a second, proved that through brute calculating abil-ity, a computer can match a human’s mental facul- Bwb4e.