Chess.com uses 2 chess engines to analyze your games, one of them an old version of Stockfish. After a quick search you can download a freeware version to your personal computer, and after following a couple simple instructions will install. It's tough and fast, here's what one chess website said about it:
"as of November 2023, is the strongest CPU chess engine in the world with an estimated Elo rating of 3546" - computerchess.org.uk
I am a student of computer science, so out of my own curiosity found out about the famous Deep Blue vs Kasparov match. The game was close. If I recall it was approximately 7 matches and Deep Blue won 4-3. Paranoid, and either uncertain of his own infallibility, or unaware of the progress of AI in chess engines he accused the team setting up the challenge (and large pot if he won) of "having several grandmasters on the other end of the computer moving the pieces." Kasparov's Elo rating in 1999 was 2851. Chess AI has come a long way. If he challenged the computer today he may win only 1 game, or none at all. Even Carlsen, I believe, is sub-3000.
The engine nowadays can beat every human chess player that ever existed with consistency. We don't stand the slightest chance anymore. By the way, Magnus has a rating of 2830 at the moment but his top was 2882.
The Atlantic says Deep Blue's Elo rating was 2853, just for perspective. I believe the computer was dismantled and retired shortly after the match. It was made by IBM
Chess.com uses 2 chess engines to analyze your games, one of them an old version of Stockfish. After a quick search you can download a freeware version to your personal computer, and after following a couple simple instructions will install. It's tough and fast, here's what one chess website said about it:
"as of November 2023, is the strongest CPU chess engine in the world with an estimated Elo rating of 3546" - computerchess.org.uk
I am a student of computer science, so out of my own curiosity found out about the famous Deep Blue vs Kasparov match. The game was close. If I recall it was approximately 7 matches and Deep Blue won 4-3. Paranoid, and either uncertain of his own infallibility, or unaware of the progress of AI in chess engines he accused the team setting up the challenge (and large pot if he won) of "having several grandmasters on the other end of the computer moving the pieces." Kasparov's Elo rating in 1999 was 2851. Chess AI has come a long way. If he challenged the computer today he may win only 1 game, or none at all. Even Carlsen, I believe, is sub-3000.