Then on 1985, Deep Blue, built by the Carnegie Mellon University, became the first engine to surpass humans in chess, after it beat former World Champion Garry Kasparov in 1997. The engine uses a supercomputer and can evaluate up to 200 million positions per second. Garry Kasparov playing against Deep BlueOn 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
The most famous use of this opening was in the third game in the Deep Blue versus Garry Kasparov match in 1997. Kasparov believed that the computer would play the opening poorly if it had to rely on its own skills rather than on its opening book. The game was drawn.
World Chess champion Garry Kasparov barely acknowledges the handshake from Dr. C.J. Tan head of the IBM Deep Blue computer team which defeated Kasparov in the six-game series that ended on May 11 Teaming the two in chess, experts say, produces a force that plays better chess than either humans or computers can manage on their own. Centaur chess is all about amplifying human performance. The human plus machine style of play is called Freestyle (often played online) and the rules of the game allow chess players to consult outside sources . 69 28 63 276 291 147 117 96 340