Valery Salov wins the Wijk aan Zee, Corus chess tournament with 8½/13. Kasparov vs. The European Team Chess Championship, held in Pula, is won by England, on tie-break from Russia. England's Matthew Sadler posts an outstanding 7/9 score, which echoes his performance at last year's Chess Olympiad. Garry Kasparov is one of the greatest chess minds that has ever played the game. How Kasparov’s defeat by Deep Blue incited a new era for AI; It took until the 1980s for a dedicated computer to beat an accomplished chess player but the first major human scalp to … In 1997, IBM Deep Blue became the first computer to defeat a world chess champion in tournament conditions. Like a lot of people, I heard back in 1997 that the IBM chess computer Deep Blue had beaten world champion Garry Kasparov. Viewable chess game Garry Kasparov vs Deep Blue (Computer), 1997, with discussion forum and chess analysis features. ="[Post:view_link]">The results may surprise you. The new model, Deeper Blue, was fed with more chess software to … Deep Blue (1997 Rematch) The much anticipated rematch of man vs. machine brought much excitement not only to chess fans but to the entire world. Deep Blue was a chess-playing computer that IBM developed which became famous for playing a game against the reigning chess champion, Garry Kasparov, in 1996, and winning a match against him in 1997. Anand wins the 30th Biel Chess Festival in Switzerland (7/10). Kasparov vs Deep Blue. Here we take a close look at the most controversial move from game two, that prompted Kasparov to accuse the Deep Blue team of cheating. Multiple parallel processors enabled the supercomputer to calculate more than 200 million chess moves per second. Since the seminal 1997 victory, chess-playing computer programs have built upon Deep Blue's developments to become even more proficient and efficient. Despite having lost a previous match against Kasparov in 1996, Deep Blue won the 1997 match 3.5 to 2.5 and became the first computer program to defeat a world chess champion in match play. Kasparov conquered Deep Blue in their 1996 match. Kasparov played in many epic matches and one of the most memorable series was that agaist the super computer from IBM called Deep Blue. Could the Deep Blue team create a stronger machine in one year to take on the world's best chess player? It is a sign of just how impactful the famous Deep Blue match against Kasparov was in 1997, that 18 years later, books come out citing it still, and magazines such as Time cast their eye on it even today. For 20 years he held the highest Elo rating.