When Computers Started Beating Chess Champions - The Atlantic
Opening Gambit – A History of Chess AI and Automation - Neural Technologies
On this day in 1956, the MANIAC I supercomputer in Los Alamos became the first computer to ever defeat a human in chess. Playing a simplified 6x6 version of the game, the
The Chess Master and the Computer | Garry Kasparov | The New York Review of Books
Defeated Chess Champ Garry Kasparov Has Made Peace With AI | WIRED
The cyborg chess players that can't be beaten - BBC Future
Chess world title match starts this weekend | Financial Times
Twenty years on from Deep Blue vs Kasparov: how a chess match started the big data revolution
Will Nepo's supercomputer give him world chess title edge over Carlsen? | World Chess Championship 2021 | The Guardian
Garry Kasparov had a chess showdown with IBM's AI long before ChatGPT - The Washington Post
Kasparov vs. Deep Blue | The Match That Changed History - Chess.com
Researchers built an AI that plays chess like a person, not a super computer | Engadget
Magnus Carlsen Age 29 vs Chess.com's Maximum Computer 25 - YouTube
IBM's Deep Blue was the first supercomputer to defeat a reigning world chess champion | The Vintage News
The Chess Grandmaster Anal Bead Conspiracy, Explained
The Computer as an Athlete | Sports History Weekly