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Deep Blue Biography
Chess Computer
Deep Blue is the world's most famous chess-playing computer. Deep Blue began as a chess program named Chiptest (later Deep Thought), created by students Feng-hsiung Hsu and Thomas Anantharaman at Carnegie Mellon University. The creators later joined the IBM corporation, which supported further development of the system. Deep Thought was eventually renamed Deep Blue, a twist on IBM's corporate nickname of Big Blue. Deep Blue lost a six-game match to world chess champion Garry Kasparov in 1996. But in the 1997 rematch, Deep Blue made history by defeating Kasparov 3.5 games to 2.5.
Another computer which challenged humans is Deep Fritz... Other chess-playing wonders include the Turk and Bobby Fischer... Deep Blue is sometimes compared to fictional supercomputer HAL 9000.
Four Good Links
Kasparov vs. Deep Blue
IBM's detailed archive from 1997, including a Deep Blue FAQ
The Rematch
The story and a little analysis from some chess fans
Man vs. Machine
Nifty multi-part history of chess computers, from the science site The Why Files
Chess, Deep Blue and Intelligence
Fine archive of New York Times articles about Deep Blue
Vital Stats
Birth
Birthplace
Death
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Best Known As
The computer that beat Kasparov
