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Deep Blue game 6: May 11 @ 3:00PM EDT | 19:00PM GMT        kasparov 2.5 deep blue 3.5


White: Kasparov
Black: Deep Blue
1. Nf3
d5
2. g3
Bg4
3. Bg2
Nd7
4. h3
Bxf3
5. Bxf3
c6
6. d3
e6
7. e4
Ne5
8. Bg2
dxe4
9. Bxe4
Nf6
10. Bg2
Bb4+
11. Nd2
h5
12. Qe2
Qc7
13. c3
Be7
14. d4
Ng6
15. h4
e5
16. Nf3
exd4
17. Nxd4
O-O-O
18. Bg5
Ng4
19. O-O-O
Rhe8
20. Qc2
Kb8
21. Kb1
Bxg5
22. hxg5
N6e5
23. Rhe1
c5
24. Nf3
Rxd1+
25. Rxd1
Nc4
26. Qa4
Rd8
27. Re1
Nb6
28. Qc2
Qd6
29. c4
Qg6
30. Qxg6
fxg6
31. b3
Nxf2
32. Re6
Kc7
33. Rxg6
Rd7
34. Nh4
Nc8
35. Bd5
Nd6
36. Re6
Nb5
37. cxb5
Rxd5
38. Rg6
Rd7
39. Nf5
Ne4
40. Nxg7
Rd1+
41. Kc2
Rd2+
42. Kc1
Rxa2
43. Nxh5
Nd2
44. Nf4
Nxb3+
45. Kb1
Rd2
46. Re6
c4
47. Re3
Kb6
48. g6
Kxb5
49. g7
Kb4
50. Draw!



Game 5, black
14...Ng6

Commentary for black move 14:

AUDIENCE MEMBER: Usually the -- you said the computer looks at every possible move. So if it has at some point, 50 moves or so, analyzed every possible move, or at some point does it prune out some moves? Because if it does analyze any move then I don't think it can go beyond a ply of seven or eight, which goes to a depth --

DB MOVE: 14...Ng6.

MAURICE ASHLEY: A very natural move at this point. And we are expecting the move h3-h4 by Kasparov in order to stop, preempt this possibility of h5-h4. But to repeat the question, Yaz, if the computer is looking at all these moves k it really look that deep?

YASSER SEIRAWAN: Yes, that's the whole point. With this parallel processing technology, the computer essentially has an assembly line, if you will, of microcomputer processors. And the computer sends instructions to each of these processors and says, "Here say problem. Work on it, report back to us." And through this massive parallel processing, you get incredential calculations. 200 million positions per second translates to 12 billion positions per minute. Deep Blue has an internal time control of three minutes a move, which is 36 billion positions. That's a lot of positions. It seeds a -- sees a lot of possibilities, and what's even worse, it gets worse. The worst part is the computer thinks when Kasparov is thinking. So when Garry goes into his 15-minute meditations as he says, "Okay, what am I going to do to set up victory," the computer may look at half a trillion positions --

MAURICE ASHLEY: Easily.

YASSER SEIRAWAN: -- over the course of a half an hour. That's phenomenal.

MAURICE ASHLEY: That number is so astounding, one has to wonder how the heck has Kasparov played a decent game of chess against this thing. But in fact, in point of fact all those moves it's looking at are not great moves.

Real-time text commentary is made possible by LiveNote, Inc. and Vincent Varallo Associates




  


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