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Deep blue chess ai
Deep blue chess ai











“Given the predominantly panicky narrative surrounding the age of smart machines, Kasparov’s Deep Thinking serves as a welcome breath of fresh air. May 11th, 2017 The Day Machines Took Over “Kasparov now believes computers will take over menial mental tasks and thus allow humans to pursue ‘creativity, curiosity, beauty, and joy.’ Robin Hanson reviews “Deep Thinking: Where Machine Intelligence Ends and Human Creativity Begins” by Garry Kasparov.” by Robin Hinman for The Wall Street Journal. We must face these fears in order to get the most out of our technology and to get the most out of ourselves.” Vivek Wadhwa for The Washington Post Perhaps you will experience a similar feeling the first time you ride in a driverless car, or the first time your new computer boss issues an order at work. Kasparov wrote: “When I sat across from Deep Blue twenty years ago I sensed something new, something unsettling. May 31st, 2017 Is AI the end of jobs or a new beginning?

#Deep blue chess ai series#

It reflected a series of misperceptions - about chess, about computers, and about the mind.” by Nicholas Carr for the Los Angeles Review of Books But, as the former world chess champion Garry Kasparov argues in his illuminating new memoir Deep Thinking, the theory was flawed from the start. It was a compelling theory, and to this day it shapes public perceptions of artificial intelligence. “To build a machine able to beat a skilled human player would be to fabricate a mind. JA Brutal Intelligence: AI, Chess, and the Human Mind by Jonathan Schaeffer for the MIT Technology Review Instead of worrying about what machines can do, we should worry more about what they still cannot do”. “If we feel like we are being surpassed by our own technology it’s because we aren’t pushing ourselves hard enough, aren’t being ambitious enough in our goals and dreams. July 10th, 2017 Kasparov Thinks Deeply about His Battle with a Machine











Deep blue chess ai