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Computers may have gotten better at chess, but human players can still find chinks in their defense, the world chess champion says. Just don't try to break them down psychologically. Ever since ...
Computing, as a science and an industry, has always been intimately connected with games, and with none more so than chess. In Chess, Qualified Respect for Computers - Los Angeles Times ...
Two decades later, computers now regularly beat humans at chess, writes Klint Finley for Wired. The great contest of man-versus-computer chess is over. “Today, for $50, ...
For years, powerful chess computers have been crucial partners for the game’s best minds. Ever since then-champion Garry Kasparov lost a match in 1997 against an IBM supercomputer, chess ...
Humans vs. computers in chess: We’re really on… Share this: Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to print (Opens in new window) ...
Computers haven’t killed chess — they’ve made it a universal sport. Skip to main content. Sections. Search. ePaper. Podcasts. Created with Sketch. Newsletters. More. Watch: Globe Today.
How computers changed chess Published: November 28, 2013 10:23pm EST. Guillermo Campitelli, Edith Cowan University. Author. Guillermo Campitelli ...
Magnus Carlsen's success in the world chess championship illustrates a paradoxical development: Chess-playing computers, far from revealing the limits of human ability, have actually pushed it to ...
"Computer Chess" makes an affecting preservationist plea, in this case for a visual and material culture that, while not objectively beautiful, possessed its own form of buttoned-down passion ...