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Vladimir Kramnik is in the lead after the third game of an eight-game contest pitting the world chess champion against the German-built Deep Fritz 7 computer.
Ever since IBM's chess programme Deep Blue beat world champion Gary Kasparov in 1996, it's no longer news when a chess computer beats a top human player.Now the machines are playing one another ...
A computer made from DNA that can solve basic chess and sudoku puzzles could one day, if scaled up, save vast amounts of energy over traditional computers when it comes to tasks like training ...
The world's leading chess computer, Deep Fritz, has roundly beat its human counterpart, the Russian world chess champion, Vladimir Kramnik, in a six game encounter in Germany.
The DNA computer can play a pared down version of chess and can potentially store data for thousands of years.
"I got checkmated in 34 moves." Levy Rozman a.k.a. GothamChess plays chess against Stockfish 16, the strongest chess computer in the world, and analyzes the way it thinks in order to apply it to ...