Every Day is A Reward
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Finally Chess Champ Lost to Computer
Posted on December 6th, 2006 No commentsCNN reported that Vladimir Kramnik, the world class champion, lost his final game in match against program Deep Fritz yesterday – 5th
Dec.Fritz was lost to Kramnik 4 years ago in 2002. Now it’s back after a major upgrade. Anyway, I still think that this match is not man vs. machine as titled. Kramnik is not lost to machine but the two men, Frans Morsch and Mathias Feist, who invented the software.This is awful news to me. I’ve rarely won against computer game but I’ve always thought that there might be someone who will always win. This is not true anymore. Is this what we’ve expected that computer will win against human being in every aspect in next coming years? We will have many genius robots who do everything for us and finally kill us as in the movie!? We will be weak and weaker ‘coz we need a robot helping us this, that, and those.What is the next step?
Vladimir Kramnik was born in June 25, 1975 in Moscow. Kramnik started to play chess at the age of five. At 12, his enormous talent wasrecognized in Moscow and encouraged. He won the U18 world championship at only 16. He won the 14th Classical World Chess Champion. He is also the three-time Olympiad winner as a member of the Russian team.Deep Fritz is a multi-processor version of the computer chess engine Fritz written by Frans Morsch and Mathias Feist. Deep Fritz 10, a commercial version that also runs on a single processor PC was released in November 2006 by Chessbase.
Link
- Computer checkmates chess champ
- Vladimir Kramnik’s official web site
- Chess News
- The Duel: man vs. machine official web site
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