Deep Thought was a computer designed to play chess. Deep Thought was initially developed at Carnegie Mellon University and later at IBM. [1] It was second in the line of chess computers developed by Feng-hsiung Hsu, starting with ChipTest and culminating in Deep Blue. In addition to Hsu, the Deep Thought team included Thomas Anantharaman, Mike
Deep Blue was a computer developed by IBM to beat grandmaster Garry Kasparov, the top chess player in the world at the time according to Elo ratings. Playing White, Deep Blue won this first game in the match on February 10, 1996, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Kasparov rebounded over the next five games, winning three and drawing two, to
Starting tabula rasa, our new program AlphaGo Zero achieved superhuman performance, winning 100–0 against the previously published, champion-defeating AlphaGo. Our new method uses a deep neural network fθ with parameters θ. This neural network takes as an input the raw board representation s of the position and its history, and outputs both
1 DEEP BLUE vs GARRY KASPAROV. New York, 1997. 19 moves. Win: Deep Blue. Garry Kasparov, undisputed world champion from 1985 to 1993, became the first champion to lose a match to a computer. InFor comparison, one of the most powerful computers, Deep(er) Blue, was able to squeeze out 200 million moves per second. In 1997 Deep(er) Blue even beat the famous Garry Kasparov with 3.5 to 2.5. But then I found this link that claims that even an iPhone 5s would be almost better than Deep Blue.