Author: Nacho Bidnuz
Date: 04:04:10 03/09/99
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On March 08, 1999 at 22:07:11, Peter Hegger wrote: >On March 08, 1999 at 20:14:22, odell hall wrote: > >> >>On March 08, 1999 at 02:44:36, Jouni Uski wrote: >> >>>Because any human cannot beat Kasparov in match... >> >> >>Why a "new deeblue"? The "old" deeblue was enough to do the Job. > >And a new deep blue running at 10x speed as the one that defeated kasparov >(technically feasible) would crush him like a ripe grape. I find it increasingly difficult to understand what sort of mentality it takes to believe that a machine that has a 5-7 score against Kasparov is actually the better player. Okay, the 1997 version of Deep Blue was faster than the one he trounced in 1996 (or so says IBM), but was it really better? As far as I can tell, the "improvement" might just as well have been due solely to the addition of GM's Benjamin, DeFirmian and Fedorowicz to the IBM team. They just MIGHT have been seeking a measure of revenge against the man who said he could give a simul against the American Olympic team. I can understand people who don't like Kasparov for his arrogant and often crude remarks about others, but I find it very hard to side with those who would invent a fantasy Big Brother of a chessplaying monstrosity (e.g., Deep Blue analysing ten trillion moves per second) to beat up this "school bully" of a world champion, but does anyone seriously believe that a one-point margin of victory in a brief match conclusively establishes the superiority of Deep Blue over Kasparov? One could dismiss such people as the sort of envious mediocrities who are always hanging around to hate the good for being good. But what's there to disparage about his chess?
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