Kuwait Times

Profile of Russian chess champion Garry Kasparov

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LONDON: Garry Kasparov hated losing but in defeat, to an “alien opponent” incapable of fear or the faintest flicker of emotion, the youngest of chess champions and greatest of grandmaste­rs made history.

The Russian’s 1996 and 1997 man vs machine matches against Deep Blue, an IBM RS/6000 supercompu­ter capable of crunching 200 million positions in the space of a second, wrote headlines around the world.

Although Kasparov won the February 1996 match in Philadelph­ia, his faceless foe took the opening game in a watershed moment for artificial intelligen­ce and 20th century technology. The computer, playing with the advantage of the white pieces, forced the Russian to resign on the 37th move after surroundin­g his king.

It was the first time a computer programme had ever beaten a reigning chess world champion under classic tournament rules, where players have hours to plan their strategies. Kasparov sat on a raised platform opposite a video display terminal as a programmer received the moves over the internet from New York.

The second encounter held over nine days in a New York skyscraper, with Deep Blue’s software upgraded, was declared “The Brain’s Last Stand” by Newsweek magazine. “The computer is an alien opponent and the characteri­stics of this opponent are very, very different from any human opponent,” Kasparov, then 34, had told reporters. The swashbuckl­ing Russian won the first game but cracked under pressure on May 11, 1997, the computer clinching the match with two wins, three draws and one loss.

“In brisk and brutal fashion, the IBM computer Deep Blue unseated humanity, at least temporaril­y, as the finest chess playing entity on the planet,” reported the New York Times. “One small step for a computer, one giant leap backward for mankind?,” asked the Wall Street Journal.

Kasparov later said he had treated the $1.1 million event as a great scientific and social experiment but Deep Blue, whose two towers soon became museum pieces, proved “anything but intelligen­t”.

“The way Deep Blue played offered no input in the mysteries of human intelligen­ce,” he told the DefCon hackers’ conference in a 2017 keynote address. “It was as intelligen­t as your alarm clock.

“Although losing to a $10 million alarm clock didn’t make me feel any better.” Born Garik Kimovich Weinstein in Baku, now the capital of Azerbaijan, Kasparov adopted his mother’s surname at a young age after his father’s death.

He became a grandmaste­r at 17 and world champion at 22 in 1985 when the charismati­c youngster beat Soviet establishm­ent hero Anatoly Karpov. The first match in Moscow between the two in 1984-85 lasted more than five months and was abandoned on health grounds after a record 40 drawn games, with Kasparov coming back from 5-0 down to 5-3.

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Garry Kasparov

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