Game 3, white
17.Rb2
Commentary for white move 17:
For example, there's already a project underway at the IBM T. J.
Watson Research Center to accelerate the -- to build a computer
in the same style using an SP supercomputer and special-purpose
hardware to solve the problem of -- pharmaceutical companies
use in designing new drugs. They can simulate the behavior of
a possible drug before actually having to synthesize it and
test it in the lab. So you can save potentially a lot of time
and get drugs to the market faster --
GK MOVE: 15 Rb2
MURRAY CAMPBELL: -- if you could speed up the process in
testing.
YASSER SEIRAWAN: We do have a move. Garry Kasparov is
playing -- it seems that Garry to me is playing the same
cat-and-mouse game as the program. He's played Rb1-b2, not
doing anything special with the white pieces, but certainly
improving the position of the rook. The rook now on b2 always
has this possibility of sliding over on the king-side, should
it be -- should that possibility exist in the future. At the
same time, it does prevent this knight on d4 from access to
either the e2 or c2 squares.
So in a sense the computer has passed. Garry has said, "Well,
I'm going to pass as well, but at least my pass will give me
that little-bit more significance.
I had actually expected a little bit more of an active move from
Garry and expected the move h2-h3 with the idea of maybe knight
f2-g4.
A quick question. We'll let the audience have one more question
also, Murray?
MIKE VALVO: Murray wants to go now.
YASSER SEIRAWAN: Murray wants to go now. Okay.
MIKE VALVO: I wonder if something's wrong with Deep Blue?
Why
did he have to leave so soon?
YASSER SEIRAWAN: It's like, I can't think, let me get out of
here.
MIKE VALVO: Oh, he's back. Would you like us to repeat that
question? Mur miles an hour I will take one more, question.
YASSER SEIRAWAN: Quick question from me and then I'm going to
take one from the audience. Does it annoy you that Garry is
not playing like Garry? In other words, he's not his active
self, what maybe you prepared for? Or is it a compliment?
MURRAY CAMPBELL: We have to prepare for -- we are prepared
for
the real Garry and the anti-computer Garry. (Audience
laughter.) It doesn't annoy me. We just assumed that that was
a possibility.
YASSER SEIRAWAN: And one question from the audience before
Murray leaves. Please, sir.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: If the point of the computer is to learn to do
the most complex reasoning, and it obviously improves very
fast, why couldn't you let it -- why couldn't you let Garry
study its game program before? Because if he did, he would
obviously very easily exploit the weaknesses and it would grow
much, much faster and be much more able to play like a human
player. I mean why didn't you let it -- why didn't you let
that happen, if the point is to improve the computer? To make
these very complex, human reasoning.
MURRAY CAMPBELL: Right well, we haven't actually played Deep
Blue in any tournaments since last year. We've been working
very hard in order to improve the program, and I'm sure if we
let Garry have the program and run with it --
AUDIENCE MEMBER: No, I mean that --
MURRAY CAMPBELL: -- and practice with it --
AUDIENCE MEMBER: You must have made test games against you
or
other computers, and just show how it moved in response to
other moves. And if you could see that, he could probably
exploit it much better the weaknesses and therefore you could
improve the weaknesses much faster.
MURRAY CAMPBELL: That's possible, would you also have Garry
give
us all his training moves --
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Well, you know his moves --
MURRAY CAMPBELL: -- excuse me -- all his training games that
he's played against computers, and computer strategy? You
would have that --
AUDIENCE MEMBER: If you want the best chess possible, sure.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: I mean if the point is to make it -- if you
know, for example, he will not play different against a
computer than against a normal player. And he will /SPHROEU
what he thinks the weakness of a computer is, not what's the
best chess game, then wouldn't it be better for him to know and
exploit them so that it didn't have these computer weaknesses.
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