Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Deep Blue was a chess-playing expert system run on a unique purpose-built IBM supercomputer. It was the first computer to win a game, and the first to win a match, against a reigning world champion under regular time controls. Development began in 1985 at Carnegie Mellon University under the name ChipTest.

  2. Deep Blue was a chess computer developed by IBM. It is famous for defeating the chess world champion, GM Garry Kasparov, in their 1997 match. Deep Blue's victory was viewed as a symbolic testament to the rise of artificial intelligence—a victory for machine versus man. The Deep Blue project (initially called ChipTest) was created by Feng ...

  3. www.ibm.com › history › deep-blueDeep Blue | IBM

    Deep Blue was able to evaluate 200 million chess positions per second, achieving a processing speed of 11.38 billion floating-point operations per second, or flops. By comparison, IBM’s first supercomputer, Stretch, introduced in 1961, had a processing speed of less than 500 flops. Deep Blue wasn’t just a breakthrough for the world of chess.

  4. Oct 1, 2018 · Game 6. Kasparov stuck to his game plan and strategy with White keeping a more closed position against Deep Blue. This was the most one-sided game of the match, and Kasparov was able to put the final nail in the coffin of Deep Blue, proving that man was still king of the royal game. Kasparov conquered Deep Blue in their 1996 match.

  5. May 25, 2022 · Deep Blue is one such shark—this female great white is thought to be the biggest in the world. She is an estimated 20 feet long and weighs over 5,500 pounds.

  6. May 17, 2024 · Deep Blue, computer chess-playing system designed by IBM in the early 1990s. As the successor to Chiptest and Deep Thought, earlier purpose-built chess computers, Deep Blue was designed to succeed where all others had failed.In 1996 it made history by defeating Russian grandmaster Garry Kasparov in one of their six games—the first time a computer had won a game against a world champion under ...

  7. Deep Blue versus Garry Kasparov was a pair of six-game chess matches between then-world chess champion Garry Kasparov and an IBM supercomputer called Deep Blue. Kasparov won the first match, held in Philadelphia in 1996, by 4–2.

  8. 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 ...

  9. Jun 2, 2017 · Computing. Twenty years ago IBM’s Deep Blue computer stunned the world by becoming the first machine to beat a reigning world chess champion in a six-game match. The supercomputer’s success ...

  10. Jan 25, 2021 · Deep Blue could explore up to 100 million possible chess positions per second, according to the IBM article. “Hundreds of millions of people around the world play chess," Campbell said in a 2017 ...

  1. People also search for