The No. 2 human played Kasparov 18 games, and won one. Deep Blue played Kasparov and won its very first game. And it was no fluke. Over the first four games, the machine played Kasparov dead even--one win, one loss, two draws--before the champ rallied and came away with the final two games. Kasparov won the match. That was expected.
第2局の終局模様と特に44.Kf1に関して、チェスジャーナリストのミグ・グリーンガードは映画『Game Over: Kasparov and the Machine』において、「最後のポジションは実際は引き分けであり、ディープ・ブルーの最終ムーブはとんでもない間違いだったことが分かった
Deep Blue is the chess machine that defeated then-reigning World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov in a six-game match in 1997. There were a number of factors that contributed to this success, including: •. a single-chip chess search engine, •. a massively parallel system with multiple levels of parallelism, •. a strong emphasis on search
2/8/2003 – The final game of the epic Man vs Machine match between Garry Kasparov and Deep Junior ended today in a 3-3 tie. With millions of TV viewers watching Kasparov came out fighting, but with the black pieces he was unable to gain enough to secure a clear win. Here is a short report and the game. ChessBase 17 - Mega package - Edition
A chess-playing computer developed by IBM, won its first game against a world champion on Feb. 10 1996, when it defeated Garry Kasparov in game one of a 6 game match. However, Kasparov won 3 and drew 2 of the following 5 games, defeating Deep Blue 4-2. Deep Blue was then heavily upgraded, and played Kasparov again in May 1997 winning the 6 game
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garry kasparov vs deep blue 1997 game 6