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  • 5 жыл бұрын

Deep Thinking | Garry Kasparov | Talks at Google

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Talks at GoogleTalks at Google
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Garry Kasparov and DeepMind’s CEO Demis Hassabis discuss Garry’s new book “Deep Thinking”, his match with Deep Blue and his thoughts on the future of AI in the world of chess.

Get the book here: goo.gl/OwuOcW

Event moderated by Demis Hassabis, CEO, DeepMind.

** About the book, Deep Thinking: Where Machine Intelligence Ends and Human Creativity Begins **

In May 1997, the world watched as Garry Kasparov, the greatest chess player in the world, was defeated for the first time by the IBM supercomputer Deep Blue. It was a watershed moment in the history of technology: machine intelligence had arrived at the point where it could best human intellect.
It wasn't a coincidence that Kasparov became the symbol of man's fight against the machines. Chess has long been the fulcrum in development of machine intelligence; the hoax automaton 'The Turk' in the 18th century and Alan Turing's first chess program in 1952 were two early examples of the quest for machines to think like humans -- a talent we measured by their ability to beat their creators at chess. As the pre-eminent chessmaster of the 80s and 90s, it was Kasparov's blessing and his curse to play against each generation's strongest computer champions, contributing to their development and advancing the field.

Like all passionate competitors, Kasparov has taken his defeat and learned from it. He has devoted much energy to devising ways in which humans can partner with machines in order to produce results better than either can achieve alone. During the twenty years since playing Deep Blue, he's played both with and against machines, learning a great deal about our vital relationship with our most remarkable creations. Ultimately, he's become convinced that by embracing the competition between human and machine intelligence, we can spend less time worrying about being replaced and more thinking of new challenges to conquer.

In this breakthrough book, Kasparov tells his side of the story of Deep Blue for the first time -- what it was like to strategize against an implacable, untiring opponent -- the mistakes he made and the reasons the odds were against him. But more than that, he tells his story of AI more generally, and how he's evolved to embrace it, taking part in an urgent debate with philosophers worried about human values, programmers creating self-learning neural networks, and engineers of cutting edge robotics.

Жүктеу

Пікірлер: 577

  • Julio Santoro
    Julio Santoro
    4 жыл бұрын
    Kasparov can even answer your question before you finish asking. That's how far he can calculate.
  • Theodore Bervoets
    Theodore Bervoets
    9 ай бұрын
    A lot of chess players do this when they talk to someone it kinda becomes a habit after you do it for so long
  • Guillermo Acosta
    Guillermo Acosta
    Жыл бұрын
    @PornobrillenAli Yes! And 28:10 young lady looks Garry in suspicious way ....( I heard you Garry !)
  • campy
    campy
    4 жыл бұрын
    There's so much energy and passion in the way he talks. So fascinating and inspiring!
  • Versatile Geniuses
    Versatile Geniuses
    Ай бұрын
    @ChessMasters236 he talks in *bold*
  • ChessMasters236
    ChessMasters236
    3 жыл бұрын
    yeah i was thinking of how passionate he is
  • M
    M
    Жыл бұрын
    13:50 "Computers are useless because they can only give you answers, but everything begins with a question" Brilliant
  • Luba Matity
    Luba Matity
    2 күн бұрын
    That started off as not smart and then aged badly.
  • Null
    Null
    16 күн бұрын
    so if computer can give answers, then they are not useless, you just have to ask them questions. That's even how chess players prepare their openings today... by asking questions to the computer!
  • colum mahony
    colum mahony
    Жыл бұрын
    Let me begin with a question, what’s the best move?
  • Dr Gamma D
    Dr Gamma D
    Жыл бұрын
    he was a legendary BS-er, and this quote was more of it. Neither deep, nor prescient figuratively, and certainly not even correct when taken literally.
  • KARTIKEYA007
    KARTIKEYA007
    Жыл бұрын
    @Kaje Ralocse bad line because computers answer those questions
  • Daniel Thomas
    Daniel Thomas
    5 жыл бұрын
    I love his point about our brains becoming subordinate to AI, people becoming too reliant on someone or something else to do the math for them. I think it's important we think for ourselves and figure things out for ourselves and not just submit to an established model, in most areas of life, and not just chess. Great talk given by Mr Kasparov!
  • Vallo Tubli
    Vallo Tubli
    4 жыл бұрын
    Don't know if it's worth to mention but Garry was my neighbor in Tallinn old town :) I never assumed he spoke so good English and we always had the small talk in Russian and my Russian is really broken and he heard me several times speaking English over telephone. Don't know what to think of it but I assume he was just being helpful and willing to help me improve my Russian skills.
  • MyMusic
    MyMusic
    9 ай бұрын
    Garry is a learning engine. Only natural think he would easily learn a new set of rules, syntaxes, patterns…
  • ПАУК
    ПАУК
    Жыл бұрын
    @Zarina Bostanova I learn English now with Garry Kasparov :)
  • turcoboshnak
    turcoboshnak
    Жыл бұрын
    @Zarina Bostanova I had the exact same thought :)
  • Zarina Bostanova
    Zarina Bostanova
    Жыл бұрын
    he learned english later. at the time he was your neighbor his english was broken))
  • Parth Pawar
    Parth Pawar
    Жыл бұрын
    You are lucky 😉 Legend is your neighbour !
  • N L
    N L
    2 жыл бұрын
    Kasparov is the kind of guy that you hear talking for a minute and you know he is intelligent on many levels, not just chess.
  • David Chandra
    David Chandra
    Жыл бұрын
    Its rare to find "old school" people that can accept the existent of technology like Kasparov
  • Eric Buxtehude
    Eric Buxtehude
    3 жыл бұрын
    Kasparov is like an intellectual version of Mike Tyson
  • B S
    B S
    Ай бұрын
    @Nilesh Seban alternatively, for a more nuanced interpretation, people reject bad similes and appreciate good ones...
  • Nilesh Seban
    Nilesh Seban
    Ай бұрын
    Now people can't understand simile. 😞
  • B S
    B S
    3 ай бұрын
    @Rakitha Dhramasena mike tyson as smart as you think he is, how do you compare it to a guy who literally spent his whole life dominating a game where combat never involved physically punishing the other guy? Come on now lets get real
  • Rakitha Dhramasena
    Rakitha Dhramasena
    Жыл бұрын
    Tyson is a pretty deep dude IMO , specially if you listen to some of the interviews where he speaks at length.
  • Josh Couture
    Josh Couture
    Жыл бұрын
    He peaked in his early 20's?
  • Mordimer's Chess Channel
    Mordimer's Chess Channel
    2 жыл бұрын
    Great interview, full of passion of energy. Definitely the best spent 40 minutes today :)
  • XxKo0loxX
    XxKo0loxX
    4 жыл бұрын
    What we can take away from this discussion is if there ever is a hair regrowth product that actually works, then Kasparov will once again dominate the world of chess.
  • Russ Wilson
    Russ Wilson
    Жыл бұрын
    I'm sure if I could find a hair regrowth product that actually works, that it would improve my game. smile
  • Vee
    Vee
    Жыл бұрын
    If he tries minoxidil, he just might🤔
  • Quick Silver
    Quick Silver
    2 жыл бұрын
    Underrated haha
  • Souvik Bhattacharyya
    Souvik Bhattacharyya
    Жыл бұрын
    It amazes me how Garry is still so passionate about the game when he talks about it. He is an amazing guy and an inspiration to anyone following his or her own passion.
  • Sushil Patel
    Sushil Patel
    Жыл бұрын
    The thing that struck me most, and what I happened to realize even before viewing this wonderful interview, is that humans can do some amazing things without being able to explain how they do it, and what that means is, that computers will always lag until a human can translate how they do it. Get it? Perhaps I did not express it well enough.
  • Mike Headley
    Mike Headley
    3 жыл бұрын
    "It's not about solving the game, it's about winning the game." That is tremendously insightful.
  • Dr Gamma D
    Dr Gamma D
    Жыл бұрын
    @Stuart Fleming checkers is solved. No limit holdem is not.
  • Gile
    Gile
    2 жыл бұрын
    @Stuart Fleming Yeah. I've never played connect 4 but a friend mentioned it had a known solution. We'll see with chess as computers (or AI) continue to evolve, if it happens in our lifetime at all that is.
  • Stuart Fleming
    Stuart Fleming
    2 жыл бұрын
    @Gile Thanks for the response. Yeh these things fascinate me too, I noticed in Connect 4 (the game you drop red and yellow coins in from the top), its impossible to lose if you know exactly where to go and will always end in a draw if the opponent does aswell. Chess however has so many variables I just dont think its possible to be 'solved' in the same way.
  • Gile
    Gile
    2 жыл бұрын
    @Stuart Fleming I don't know since it hasn't been solved lol. Probably, since depending on your opponents next move different moves would be optimal, it would more likely be a move that gives you the highest possible chance of not losing in the long run. Maybe something to that extent can be proven mathematically. There has been a lot of work done on the math behind chess but I've never come across a paper like that. I thought about this a little more. Even in tic tac toe if I go corner, my opponent goes center, I have 2 different corners to choose which would be equally optimal (since the board is symmetrical). But whichever corner I choose my opponent is locked into playing the game on the terms I've chosen, he's locked into the dance I'm leading, otherwise he'll lose on the next move. So his best move is to stop me from winning immediately. Which coincidentally makes me forced to defend against an immediate loss. Only way to lose is a blunder, but with a solved game there is no blunder. Chess is of course more complex than that. The board stops being symmetrical in the first few moves usually.
  • Stuart Fleming
    Stuart Fleming
    2 жыл бұрын
    @Gile But some moves can have equally good values no? Its not like checkers where thats probably true
  • A Hofer
    A Hofer
    4 жыл бұрын
    Kasparov, being who he was....turned the 97 match into what it blew up to be. He is a passionate character. And if IBM thought that he's just going to go away with all of his issues during the match, they were fools. Some players might have just shrugged off a thing or two, and might have been able to handle the tensions better, and thus, might have even won the 97 machine. But, it just so happened that the World Champion in 96-97 was Garry Kasparov
  • Richard Feynman
    Richard Feynman
    4 жыл бұрын
    Kasparow has a very entertaining way of explaining his point of view.
  • busyrand
    busyrand
    5 жыл бұрын
    I really enjoyed this. Came here expecting a Computer Science talk but got interesting commentary about it's application instead.
  • ThjeshtLife
    ThjeshtLife
    4 жыл бұрын
    *its
  • Lupusnupus
    Lupusnupus
    3 жыл бұрын
    It's nice to see how Gary is still excited about everything.
  • BABJI PARAMATHMA
    BABJI PARAMATHMA
    4 жыл бұрын
    What a self-confidence he has! He is so proud of his achievements!! King of Chess for a reason!!!
  • David Copson
    David Copson
    2 ай бұрын
    King of chess for sure.
  • SuperAWaC
    SuperAWaC
    3 жыл бұрын
    kasparov is probably one of the few chess masters during the era of soviet dominance that didn't cheat or at least collude with other soviet players
  • Denis Mann
    Denis Mann
    Жыл бұрын
    Love his warmth, energy and enthusiasm. Brilliant...and generous.
  • Amol kapoor
    Amol kapoor
    Жыл бұрын
    Kasparov: A genius, but stuck in the dogma of winning. As his brain gets old he is missing out on the direction that wisdom and heart are equally important in achieving the highest state of experience. That's why we have two parts in a brain(left and right).
  • T42B19
    T42B19
    4 жыл бұрын
    Now we have the problem of human's cheating using engines. Back then we had the problem of engines cheating using humans.
  • Raosaheb Suryavanshi
    Raosaheb Suryavanshi
    10 ай бұрын
    @Isaac Von Gürtberg Nikhil kamat
  • Mr. Charles Smith
    Mr. Charles Smith
    Жыл бұрын
    Very funny good one go now
  • ARNOLD Clark
    ARNOLD Clark
    2 жыл бұрын
    sort of like when many grandmasters come together to put in the playing style and counters of one single player then after the match take the machine apart so no one else can play it....LOL
  • Isaac Von Gürtberg
    Isaac Von Gürtberg
    3 жыл бұрын
    Hahaha
  • Priya Mirza
    Priya Mirza
    Жыл бұрын
    what a fabulous talk. loved it.
  • Sunita Gautam
    Sunita Gautam
    Жыл бұрын
    Enlightened by your insight Garry Sir. Thanks.
  • Emilian Stoimenov
    Emilian Stoimenov
    3 ай бұрын
    So interesting rewatching these interviews from 2022. Just a few months later DeepMind would publish the first paper on AlphaZero, which could mean that during this interview Demis probably already had the results published in that paper, or the team was in the middle of developing AlphaZero. Makes you see this interview in a different light.
  • manuel felix
    manuel felix
    4 жыл бұрын
    For a GM like Kasparov is about finding the best possible move in given position suited to his "style' of play. Chess engines on the other hand get busy polling the ramifications of many moves in seconds. So you have human chess logic versus a checkmate calculator. engine.To the concept of AI you have to add AP Artificial Perception to be more human-like.
  • Ed E
    Ed E
    3 жыл бұрын
    Kasparov is sort of a wild man. He seemed nearly as "inflamed" about his 1997 loss to Deep Blue today as he was then.
  • David Copson
    David Copson
    2 ай бұрын
    It's because he's an Aries. Extremely competitive and passionate about things.
  • parkerrobert
    parkerrobert
    9 ай бұрын
    deep blue beats kasparov anywhere that french is spoken
  • BMessemer
    BMessemer
    4 жыл бұрын
    This was absolutely phenomenal.
  • D_Frost
    D_Frost
    3 жыл бұрын
    What an incredible man wish I could meet him one time in my life..
  • doinksauce
    doinksauce
    2 жыл бұрын
    he's got a very wicked brain, thinks with deep passion and logic at the same time, definitely a skill that he learned from the days living in competitive chess. Nice!
  • Marcin SKWARCZYŃSKI
    Marcin SKWARCZYŃSKI
    5 жыл бұрын
    Garry you are the best player and GM forever I wish you good look in the next A thousand years
  • Bruce Perez
    Bruce Perez
    Жыл бұрын
    Gary is analyzing and answering questions like making chess moves.
  • Bob Trower
    Bob Trower
    5 жыл бұрын
    Wow. That is an incredibly sharp mind at work. It was a real pleasure watching this.
  • Tomas Kereskeni
    Tomas Kereskeni
    5 жыл бұрын
    even that sharp mind went blown with a child question
  • Alex Abdulkader
    Alex Abdulkader
    2 жыл бұрын
    Fascinating and inspiring! What do the thumbs down mean????
  • Peter Siegfried Krug
    Peter Siegfried Krug
    6 ай бұрын
    When normal people start to calculate moves, Kasparov already calculated a whole tree of variants.
  • Gsm Client
    Gsm Client
    2 жыл бұрын
    Great man that let express his emotions Magnificent
  • Kaje Ralocse
    Kaje Ralocse
    Жыл бұрын
    Guy's really fun to talk to. He's not only a great chess player but a good talker as well. Shows how intelligent he is
  • mirza mirza
    mirza mirza
    Жыл бұрын
    Nobody sounds to care about the interviewer (Demis Hassabis). Hassabis is the creator of DeepMind (AlphaZero) and is classified as one of the 10 best scientist of the world by the magazine Nature. He's also one of the best player of chess (2nd best world player of his age at 13 years old) + one of the best world player of Go + one of the best world player of Shogi (japanese chess). 5 times world champion of Pentamind. Hassabis is probably the smartest guy in the world at this time. He sold DeepMind to Google for 400 Millions $ and now he's working on AlphaFold to predict the proteins structure. He got a lot of awards and honour all over the world. I have a lot more admiration for Hassabis than for Kasparov : en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demis_Hassabis
  • Lbv Prasad
    Lbv Prasad
    5 жыл бұрын
    Bobby Fischer, Anatoly Karpov and Gary Kasparov are shining stars in the universe of chess.
  • Santiago Méndez
    Santiago Méndez
    5 жыл бұрын
    Always great to see good ol Kaspy. If any of you is curious to see how great computer chess is these days, look up the official channel of Magnus Carlsen (current world chess champion) and watch him play against different levels of his own phone app. Again, he plays against a phone... and the engine on that phone is not even remotely close in strength to top chess engines.
  • Daniel B
    Daniel B
    3 жыл бұрын
    @auf der mitte Magnus Carlsen is nowhere near as good as Kasparov was.
  • Hamza Ilarzeg
    Hamza Ilarzeg
    3 жыл бұрын
    "Kaspy" wtf He's not your pet lol why do you people have to gay everything.
  • Jean-Marc Fueri
    Jean-Marc Fueri
    3 жыл бұрын
    True but the real fun is to play against 1990s chess computer. Like a Saitek. I had a Mach III, Elo 2000 that would beat me but at least we had a chance now and then. Mephisto was the king, then Chess Genius. But put Chess Genius against Stockfish and he get annihilated...the level of chess engine is out of this world now although it's awesome for analysis I miss the days where you could tempt it with a pawn and checkmate it even on level 5 or 6:)
  • auf der mitte
    auf der mitte
    4 жыл бұрын
    you didn't get his point, the point is that nowdays any decent chess engine even running in a phone can crush without much effort the current world champion (Which in opinion of many is even better that kasparov).
  • OlegTar
    OlegTar
    4 жыл бұрын
    a phone can do calls to remote server to get deceisions for chess
  • WiggersART
    WiggersART
    Жыл бұрын
    I for one think that even though Magnus grew up with computers i still think he would be the best in the world today without them.
  • Michael Sherwin
    Michael Sherwin
    4 жыл бұрын
    The question was asked to Gary (paraphrased) if he would be surprised if when AlphaGo (a learning system) was programmed to play chess that it would beat the best chess engine. That already happened 11+ years ago when a relatively weak engine with reinforcement learning was beating the world's best engine Rybka in 100 game matches. What engine was that? That relatively weak engine was RomiChess. Romi beat Rybka with a far greater score than Alpha Zero beat Stockfish and did it with far less training than AZ. In a 20 game match Romi won against SF's predecessor Glaurung 19/20 with no losses. That of course was after 19 previous matches where Romi only scored 1/20 in the first match with two draws. Romi did that with no prior training and on EQUAL hardware. Anyone have an opinion on any of this? Romi's learning algorithm is very well known in a very small group of individuals and I am 100% certain that the Alpha Zero team knows about RomiChess's learning algorithm. Here is a quote from the Chess Programming Wiki. "RomiChess is famous for its learning approach"
  • ade spade
    ade spade
    Жыл бұрын
    Always a pleasure listening to Kasparov.
  • Klevi Alushi
    Klevi Alushi
    5 ай бұрын
    I know really!
  • Atanu
    Atanu
    Жыл бұрын
    I never imagined Kasparov would be such a jovial, eloquent personality. I thought he'd be a reserved, inarticulate guy
  • David Copson
    David Copson
    2 ай бұрын
    Why?
  • Wingzy Tales
    Wingzy Tales
    3 жыл бұрын
    Sheer Genius in action. Excellent speech what an energy and language
  • David Copson
    David Copson
    2 ай бұрын
    English not even his mother tongue.
  • J Ravindranath
    J Ravindranath
    Жыл бұрын
    Wonderful and worth watching by every student
  • Kamakiri Sassorichan
    Kamakiri Sassorichan
    Жыл бұрын
    Such a good guy. And so fucking smart. Faster than a warp drive and deeper than the Marianas Trench.
  • Prog Life
    Prog Life
    2 жыл бұрын
    I will say so there used to be grandmasters by vocation, now industriousness plays a big role.
  • Joseph Bishara
    Joseph Bishara
    3 жыл бұрын
    Kasparov is a great speaker. His accent may obscure certain words, but if you listen closely, he makes a lot of sense.
  • Thin Shade
    Thin Shade
    Жыл бұрын
    U american?
  • Андреј Николов
    Андреј Николов
    4 жыл бұрын
    Damn this guy is a genius.
  • zachary pulling
    zachary pulling
    Жыл бұрын
    @anab0lic exactly. Watch Hikaru does iq test, he could barely solve the first couple puzzles when they were obvious
  • Kyleb Feye
    Kyleb Feye
    Жыл бұрын
    @Lord Voldemort 135 is 0.2 percent of the population and iq doesn't determine everything richard feynmann had an iq of 125 but he was definitely a genius
  • Antonio Breaux
    Antonio Breaux
    Жыл бұрын
    @Kim Yun Mi Nobody is pretending. You are talking about the most dominant chess player of all time, and the respect they have for him is far more valuable than intelligence. We are not talking about machines here, we are talking about human values.
  • Pranshu Sinha
    Pranshu Sinha
    2 жыл бұрын
    Down to earth lol I guess you never heard of his rage, thrash talk, controversies and even his dispute with fide.
  • Daniel Gontar
    Daniel Gontar
    4 жыл бұрын
    16:35 Increasing the speed of learning is a notable pedagogical issue. I wonder if the general concept he is illustrating there could be applied to other fields.
  • Rimpelmans
    Rimpelmans
    4 жыл бұрын
    And now Alpha Zero crushed Stockfish with some amazing chess. Very interesting video, I am happy this ended up in my suggestion list.
  • stephen tarr
    stephen tarr
    5 жыл бұрын
    his ego was his problem, the program had no ego, Garry played into a complex position on purpose and paid the price in the last game. Kramnik has a better style for computer matches but my phone could beat kasparov now
  • ren hoek
    ren hoek
    2 жыл бұрын
    He would make a fantastic football manager
  • Egoitz Sanz
    Egoitz Sanz
    4 жыл бұрын
    35:25 if you watch this on 2018, this moment is gold. He knew that 5 months later, stockfish was going to be smashed.
  • b richardson
    b richardson
    2 ай бұрын
    What AlphaZero did to Stockfish is just absolutely amazing and mind boggling! I just pray that we humans will be good stewards of this AI stuff.
  • Nikolai Poriadin
    Nikolai Poriadin
    3 жыл бұрын
    Unfortunately my country has lost such amazing person. But humanity not!
  • male Gupta
    male Gupta
    5 жыл бұрын
    outstanding yaar mazaa aa gya kasparov is alwaays the great.
  • vazquezb2011
    vazquezb2011
    5 жыл бұрын
    I wonder if Kasparov was aware that Demis Hassabis was once the second strongest under 14 chess player in the world (Elo rating 2300), behind Judit Polgar...
  • whitenightf3
    whitenightf3
    4 жыл бұрын
    My son beat his brother George who was rated number one at the time in England.
  • CGoody
    CGoody
    4 жыл бұрын
    Zoust you are aware judit doesn't fall under the under 14 category, and this statement was referencing years prior? And she has beaten kasparov previously.
  • Cornerstone fence Company,serving Tulsa/Broken Arrow/Jenks....
    Cornerstone fence Company,serving Tulsa/Broken Arrow/Jenks....
    5 жыл бұрын
    he is a 2239 rated FIDE Canditate Master
  • Neil
    Neil
    5 жыл бұрын
    vazquezb2011 judit polgar not even close with kasparov but her sister can be a match with him
  • FLAKEYNAVI
    FLAKEYNAVI
    5 жыл бұрын
    Dah
  • Ham 1982
    Ham 1982
    4 жыл бұрын
    the comment about Magnus human approach to the game is spot on
  • EPSTomcat11
    EPSTomcat11
    3 жыл бұрын
    Kasparov the type of guy who tells you what time it is for when you ask him 12 years later
  • Kaalen
    Kaalen
    3 жыл бұрын
    “1985, machines were weak and my hair was strong”. 😂
  • Rasike Attana
    Rasike Attana
    Жыл бұрын
    Greats Chess player of all time.
  • Eli Malinsky
    Eli Malinsky
    4 жыл бұрын
    In 1997, you needed a supercomputer crunching raw numbers with brute force calculations to even challenge a grandmaster. In 2017, all you need is an average off-the-shelf laptop with the latest chess engine installed to defeat any grandmaster, simply using clever algorithms instead of raw computational power.
  • Jean-Marc Fueri
    Jean-Marc Fueri
    3 жыл бұрын
    True. But Deep Blue was not only brute force but programming techniques and heuristics have beem greatly improved since then. Also DB could calculate 200million pos/sec which you couldn't get close to with a home computer back then. Now even my old 8 cores/16 threads calculate 15/20 million position/sec. Stockfish on a regular laptop would beat DB no problem.
  • Sonic Powerr
    Sonic Powerr
    Жыл бұрын
    i also think Garry is the greatest chess player of all time but he never got a chance to play against the another greatest of all time Robert James Fischer.
  • Harry Palmer
    Harry Palmer
    5 ай бұрын
    Garry Kasparov is a deservedly household name, both from his chess & political endeavours. I haven't seen any comments about Demis Hassabis here, he also deserves to be a household name after his achievements & contributions (already so far). Hassabis was well on the way to being a great chess champion but gave it up to pursue other things that he felt he could be more useful with. Garry Kasparov being interviewed by Demis Hassibis - wonderful! If you liked this then Demis Hassibis being interviewed by Jim Al Kahlili (another quite impressive bloke!) on The Life Scientific, BBC Radio 4 is worth a listen.
  • navningenandrehar
    navningenandrehar
    3 жыл бұрын
    I did not know Kasparov had such great language skills! I mean, I do no tthink I could speak so well in my own native language as he does is in a second language.
  • Artur Gasparyan
    Artur Gasparyan
    3 жыл бұрын
    English is probably his third or fourth language. He didn't grow up in Russia.
  • Dharma I
    Dharma I
    Жыл бұрын
    Guy's also bilingual, which is absolutely impressive as well.
  • Blablayadayadaya Beerbeerbeer
    Blablayadayadaya Beerbeerbeer
    5 жыл бұрын
    "Energy" is Kasparovs main word. In a computer the energy never drops, unless u pull the plug. The interviewer goes : "Whould you like to explain this?..." Well.... Try to stop him?! Kasparov never stops. He is the Terminator. So... Chess is two energys channeled against one another. And the one that channels the most accurate at the target wins before the other one wins. I wish I knew what my point was. But I don't have the energy to figure it out. I am not Kasparov. I am Karpov.
  • T42B19
    T42B19
    4 жыл бұрын
    Good comment, except I don't get why you made that jab at Karpov.
  • distro logic
    distro logic
    2 жыл бұрын
    People are only looking at computers to find answers instead of thinking for themselves. That is so true.
  • Mark Robbinson
    Mark Robbinson
    3 жыл бұрын
    kasparov doesn't open the door, the outsmarts physics with his 16 move plan that opens the door up for him
  • mirza mirza
    mirza mirza
    Жыл бұрын
    Well it's curious but i have more admiration for Demis Hassabis than for Garry Kasparov. Hassabis is a real genius in every matter, not only chess. He's a great player of many games AND one of the best scientist. Hassabis is very useful for the future. Kasparov is just a gamer.
  • Rajesh Rai
    Rajesh Rai
    3 күн бұрын
    kasparov is just a gamer. like einstein is just a scientist.
  • Sqpvfcg Zdxk
    Sqpvfcg Zdxk
    5 жыл бұрын
    Kasparov should play a rematch against Deep Blue for sake of promoting chess and old time's sake. It would be loved by many!!
  • Viktor Torma
    Viktor Torma
    Жыл бұрын
    he would lose 10 : 0. not nice
  • Diver
    Diver
    Жыл бұрын
    It wasn't Deep Blue that beat Kasparov. It was a committee of GMs, data analysts, developers and even phycologists. DB would play some moves instantly to create the illusion the opponent made a blunder. He was also guided by human players. If Deep Blue was left alone it would stand no chance against Kasparov. It was too soon.
  • Free Syrian
    Free Syrian
    2 жыл бұрын
    @Santiago Méndez They can just bring it to live in a way better version, by connecting it discretely to a cheap modern smartphone application ! :-D
  • Fancy Prince
    Fancy Prince
    2 жыл бұрын
    Yes but not against deep blue! Against google deep mind alphazero😉
  • Santiago Méndez
    Santiago Méndez
    2 жыл бұрын
    @mike A Well, hopefully it was worth getting into a two year old discussion just to say that.
  • jose antonio
    jose antonio
    4 жыл бұрын
    a machine just give answers but everything begins with a question,the most important in the knowlege is not the answer but the question¡¡¡¡ so true¡¡¡¡
  • Supernova
    Supernova
    4 жыл бұрын
    I would have loved to attend this presentation.
  • Utroll
    Utroll
    Жыл бұрын
    you just somehow did :)
  • Utkarsh Anand
    Utkarsh Anand
    3 жыл бұрын
    The solution to the final question asked by the man in the front about elimination of brute force, is already present in the method of genetic algorithms. Well I guess that's what the interviewer meant when he pointed that self learning systems don't use brute force.
  • Jorj Oro
    Jorj Oro
    3 жыл бұрын
    It`s really nice that Google Talks about the book and I cannot buy it from Google Books. Really nice
  • einemailadressenbesitzer einemailadressenbesitzer
    einemailadressenbesitzer einemailadressenbesitzer
    Жыл бұрын
    35:42 Demis Hassabis is such a rascal when asking Kasparov the question. The video was uploaded 06/14/2017 and on 12/05/17, the DeepMind team released a preprint introducing AlphaZero. So he exactly new that this will become true. It was also interesting to see the disappointment on Kasparov's face shortly after he was interrupted by Hassabis when this question was asked.
  • Giovanni Di Stasi
    Giovanni Di Stasi
    Жыл бұрын
    Humans are general purpose machines. Machines, on the other hand, can specialize very deeply in a specific task. There's not point in trying to resist.
  • Lbv Prasad
    Lbv Prasad
    5 жыл бұрын
    Great interview by Kasparov but what disappointed me was.....he should have lectured on how a club level player can immensely improve his chess game and what are the steps involved to overcome the bad play to excellent play. Neither the interviewer nor audience asked any question on above. GO is a board game between 2 players where the object of the game is to control as much territory as possible on the board.
  • Jonjo Senna
    Jonjo Senna
    5 жыл бұрын
    Yeah, I think him in his peak, could beat any GM at their peak, (all time). I.e. Fischer, Tal, Anand, Karpov, Morphy, but Carlson hasn't yet reached his peak yet. Although I still think Kasparov would beat him, at his peak.
  • 5 Minute Poetry Analysis
    5 Minute Poetry Analysis
    4 жыл бұрын
    Better than 1972 Fischer?
  • gimiked
    gimiked
    4 жыл бұрын
    computers destroy them all anyway. So cheers to our overlords.
  • T42B19
    T42B19
    4 жыл бұрын
    Ron Maimon Carlson is the strongest ever if you look at it from the point of view of comparing chess through time. Chess theory has advanced, analysis is done by computers etc. But that isn’t what we are talking about. You could say that a reasonably average grandmaster today would have the edge against Capablanca, but that says nothing of either of their abilities. If you brought Capablanca to today, gave him the updated theory and a computer, would anyone stand a chance? You have to look at things with the right perspective.
  • T42B19
    T42B19
    4 жыл бұрын
    Kasparov, Karpov, Fischer, Capablanca, Alekhine, all at their peak were all stronger than Carlsen, who actually peaked a couple of years ago.
  • Han Boetes
    Han Boetes
    4 жыл бұрын
    interesting, have you got a source for this?
  • M
    M
    4 жыл бұрын
    He scored 120 on Ravens

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