Difference between revisions of "Deep Blue"
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(Bot editing voiced by link to fit new standard. See Table:Categories for voice actors? for more information.) |
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|species=[[Robot|Supercomputer]] | |species=[[Robot|Supercomputer]] | ||
|origin=[[Earth]] | |origin=[[Earth]] | ||
|voiced by= | |voiced by=Tress MacNeille | ||
|first appear={{elink|2ACV16|Anthology of Interest I}} | |first appear={{elink|2ACV16|Anthology of Interest I}} | ||
|wikipedia=Deep Blue (chess computer) | |wikipedia=Deep Blue (chess computer) |
Revision as of 15:29, 30 June 2009
Tertiary character | |
Deep Blue | |
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Species | Supercomputer |
Planet of origin | Earth |
First appearance | "Anthology of Interest I" (2ACV16) |
Voiced by | Tress MacNeille |
Wikipedia has information unrelated to Futurama |
Deep Blue was a chess-playing computer developed by IBM, the first machine ever to beat a human champion. Deep Blue is seen in the episode Anthology of Interest I as the summer intern of Al Gore's Vice Presidential Action Rangers. This seems to imply that Deep Blue recieved several more upgrades following 1997 and before 1999, which resulted in it being endowed with a crude artifical intelligence. Unfortunately, it appears that Deep Blue's VLSI chess circuts were never removed, thus resulting in it's actions always being phrased in chess notation. It had no trouble playing other games like Dungeons and Dragons, though.
Additional Info
Quotes
- Al Gore: Not all problems can be solved by chess, Deep Blue. One day, you'll understand that.