Chess Grand Master Garry Kasparov, left, comtemplates his next move against IBM's Deep Blue chess computer while Chung-Jen Tan, manager of the Deep Blue project looks on during the first game of a
This early blunder by Deep Blue made Kasparov think the computer was still incapable of high level play. In game 2 Deep Blue played much better and forced Kasparov to resign giving Deep Blue a win. Kasparov later went on to claim IBM was cheating after game 1 by having grand masters suggest moves to Deep Blue for analysis or simply discuss
This match, and particularly this game, made chess and computer history. Deep Blue - Kasparov, Game 1 of 1996 Match | Chess Lessons - Chess.com IBM's Deep Blue (White) plays against World Champion Garry Kasparov (Black).
In the final game of a six-game match, world chess champion Garry Kasparov triumphs over Deep Blue, IBM’s chess-playing computer, and wins the match, 4-2.However, Deep Blue goes on to defeat Deep Blue was capable of calculating up to 200 million positions per second. Kasparov and Deep Blue met again a year later, when the super computer defeated the chess champion in a full match. Many observers worried about a machine’s intellectual defeat of a human being, while others were encouraged by the result. . 93 103 414 74 426 393 439 194

garry kasparov vs deep blue full match