A supercomputer beat a human chess champ 30 years ago, paving a path for AI dominance

Garry Kasparov, left, takes a pawn in the opening minutes of a chess game against IBM’s Deep Blue computer in Philadelphia on Feb. 10, 1996. Feng-hsiung Hsu, right, the principal designer of Deep Blue, keys a move into the computer. Tom Mihalek/AFP

Tom Mihalek/AFP

Could a machine outthink the best human mind in the world? Thirty years ago that was still an open question, but a historic matchup between a chess grandmaster and an IBM supercomputer answered it.

On a cold February day in 1996, hundreds of chess fans filed into the Pennsylvania Convention Center in Philadelphia. They clutched scorecards

Related News

CNN economic analyst breaks down the ‘Wall Street versus Main Street divide’ | CNN Business

Police identify victim in deadly shooting after graduation ceremony in Fairfield

Elon Musk is poised to become the first trillionaire. Just how much money is $1 trillion?

The Moons of Uranus May Hold the Key to Finding Missing Planets

4 AI Prompts That Tripled a One-Person Business’s Revenue in 12 Months (No Team, No Funding, No Guessing)

The US Has a Plan to Combat Screwworm. It Involves a Lot More Flies