Garry Kasparov: IBM Deep Blue, AlphaZero, and the Limits of AI in Open Systems | AI Podcast Clips
This is a clip from a conversation with Garry Kasparov from Oct 2019. New full episodes once or twice a week and 1-2 new clips or a new non-podcast video on all other days. You can watch the full conversation here: • Garry Kasparov: Chess, Deep Blue, AI, and ... (more links below) Podcast full episodes playlist: • Lex Fridman Podcast Podcasts clips playlist: • Lex Fridman Podcast Clips Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/ai Podcast on Apple Podcasts (iTunes): https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Podcast on Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 Podcast RSS: https://lexfridman.com/category/ai/feed/ Note: I select clips with insights from these much longer conversation with the hope of helping make these ideas more accessible and discoverable. Ultimately, this podcast is a small side hobby for me with the goal of sharing and discussing ideas. For now, I post a few clips every Tue & Fri. I did a poll and 92% of people either liked or loved the posting of daily clips, 2% were indifferent, and 6% hated it, some suggesting that I post them on a separate YouTube channel. I hear the 6% and partially agree, so am torn about the whole thing. I tried creating a separate clips channel but the YouTube algorithm makes it very difficult for that channel to grow unless the main channel is already very popular. So for a little while, I'll keep posting clips on the main channel. I ask for your patience and to see these clips as supporting the dissemination of knowledge contained in nuanced discussion. If you enjoy it, consider subscribing, sharing, and commenting. Garry Kasparov is considered by many to be the greatest chess player of all time. From 1986 until his retirement in 2005, he dominated the chess world, ranking world number 1 for most of those 19 years. While he has many historic matches against human chess players, in the long arc of history he may be remembered for his match again a machine, IBM's Deep Blue. His initial victories and eventual loss to Deep Blue captivated the imagination of the world of what role Artificial Intelligence systems may play in our civilization's future. That excitement inspired an entire generation of AI researchers, including myself, to get into the field. Garry is also a pro-democracy political thinker and leader, a fearless human-rights activist, and author of several books including How Life Imitates Chess which is a book on strategy and decision-making, Winter Is Coming which is a book articulating his opposition to the Putin regime, and Deep Thinking which is a book the role of both artificial intelligence and human intelligence in defining our future. Subscribe to this YouTube channel or connect on: Twitter: / lexfridman LinkedIn: / lexfridman Facebook: / lexfridman Instagram: / lexfridman Medium: / lexfridman Support on Patreon: / lexfridman

Garry Kasparov: Chess, Deep Blue, AI, and Putin | Lex Fridman Podcast #46

Don't fear intelligent machines. Work with them | Garry Kasparov

AlphaZero vs AlphaZero || THE PERFECT GAME

Scott Galloway: The Rich Are Quietly Preparing For The AI Collapse

Feynman Explains Why light does not move

AlphaGo - The Movie | Full award-winning documentary

Garry Kasparov: Magnus Carlsen is a Lethal Combination of Fischer and Karpov | Lex Fridman Podcast

Chess Grandmaster Garry Kasparov Replays His Four Most Memorable Games | The New Yorker

AI Whistleblower: We Are Being Gaslit By AI Companies, They’re Hiding The Truth! - Karen Hao

Shocking performance boost of assembly code: ~100x faster than C code | Lex Fridman Podcast

Deep Thinking | Garry Kasparov | Talks at Google

Turing Award Winner: Disagreeing with Google, Postgres, Future Problems | Mike Stonebraker

Harari and Tegmark on Humanity and AI

Hikaru Nakamura teaches chess to Lex Fridman

I Found The GREATEST Game | Kasparov vs Topalov 1999

'Godfather of AI' predicts ALL jobs will be in 'wiped out' by AI

Garry Kasparov vs. The Entire World (1999)

Terence Tao – How the world’s top mathematician uses AI

Physicist explains the nature of time: It's a mind-blowing mystery | Don Lincoln and Lex Fridman

