Hi friends,
Russian dominance GM Garry Kasparov has been Interviewed by Leadership Magazine recently. In this Interview Garry gave many golden advice's. Enjoy it!
Children and chess
- Chess      helps to shape the way children think. More affluent schools have other      sorts of disciplines or tools to enhance thinking, but in underprivileged      districts, kids have no opportunities to actually get help with elementary      skills such as concentration and the ability to actually identify the      problem and to see the different elements of the big picture.
- Chess      is the only game that doesn’t have the traditional poverty constraints, so      it goes beyond race, social status, physical capabilities.
Computers have solved chess? 
The number of possible positions in the game of chess is in the region of 10 to the power of 120, which is considerably more than the number of atoms in the universe. Obviously, what machines can do with any engine that you run on your PC or your laptop now is phenomenal compared to what we saw 20 or even 10 years ago, and it’s almost impossible for the strongest players to beat the leading chess engines now, but the game is still very, very far from being solved. It’s mathematically impossible because the numbers are simply too big.
Human-computer combination
- But      the most powerful combination is man plus machine: that brings together      the brute force of calculation and creativity. We saw this several years      ago in so-called freestyle competition where you could actually cheat on      the Internet, play with an engine, team up or do whatever you want. The      winner was not a strong grandmaster with a strong engine: the winner of      the competition was a team of two very average players from the United      States with three average computers!
So I would probably add that a powerful engine will beat the human player; the human with an engine will beat the engine; but human or a group of humans that are relatively weak with average engines, but have a superior process will prevail, so the process actually is where we can make the most difference. This is what chess can bring to the table because this is a unique field where you can actually experiment with human abilities and the machine’s brute force of calculation. I’m looking for methods to maximise the effect of this co-operation by improving the process of decision-making.
How did chess and character-building combine in Kasparov’s case? 
- “Undoubtedly      Karpov. I spent so many hours at the chess board, hundreds of hours and      years of my life struggling against Karpov. The matches with Karpov played      a role not only for my chess biography and chess career, but also for my      character because I grew up by playing Karpov and surviving the first      match when I was down 5 to nil, and Karpov failed to win one more game to      complete the match, and then beating Karpov and taking over the world      title: that’s very much what built up or polished my character.
- I’ve      always said Anatoly Karpov was my best teacher because I learnt the most      valuable lessons in the most alien environment.
Kasparov on Magnus Carlsen
- I’m      not working now with Magnus Carlsen, and regarding talent, I could say      that Magnus is actually unique. It’s just a talent of the highest calibre,      so of Anatoly Kasparov’s class. He definitely has his weak spot as well,      and I wish we could have continued, then I’m sure he could cross not only      2850, but maybe even 2900 so he’s really number one. Also, I think he      slowed down, but it’s not only about talent, it’s about your ability to      concentrate on the game, but also to work really hard.
Could the lessons of chess be applied to leadership? 
- “Absolutely.      It’s the topic of The Blueprint, a book that I’ve been working on with my      friends Peter Thiel and Max Levchin, the founders of PayPal. Peter was      also the angel investor of Facebook. To cut a long story short: we believe      that the last 30 years were the worst years in the history of technology.      Contrary to popular belief, we’re approaching some sort of technological      slowdown because every day, every week we see some new gadget without      recognising that it’s not any kind of breakthrough or innovation. It’s      what we call incremental progress at a horizontal level.
Kasparov on innovation
- “For      example, we still fly the same planes as 40 years ago. All these new      planes – Boeing, Dreamliner, 787, Airbus V80 – it’s the same family as      Boeing 747, and the first flight of Boeing 747 was in 1969 – so it’s all      about fuel efficiency, comfortable seats, better services, but at the same      speed. Actually, it’s not the same speed: we are going down because there      is no Concorde – so it’s the first time in human history that we are      travelling from A to B slower than before. When you start looking at      all the so-called innovations that people are getting really excited      about, you’ll find the roots in the ‘50s, ‘60s, ‘70s. The first Internet      was developed by the Advanced and Research Project Agencies Arthur Group      in ‘60 to ‘63. Professor Leonard Kleinrock – I had the privilege to meet      him, and he’s interviewed for the book – wrote the work on packet      switching in 1962. The conclusion is that we’re not innovating the      way we did before: we are substituting innovations by financial      instruments; so instead of space engineers, we have financial engineers.      Today, every business plan starts with risk production concern.
Too much management, not enough leadership? 
- Absolutely. Leadership means that you are willing to go beyond conventional wisdom and to take risks. Today, risk production is not only for business, it’s also in politics. In 1969, when Americans landed on the moon, the entire computing power of NASA was the size of one iPhone. What these people did, creating the software to bring the crew to the moon and then back to earth, was phenomenal. Now we think that if NASA had the same computing powers then as they have today, maybe they wouldn’t have done it because computer simulation can show probably a 20% chance of failure, and no US president could authorize a mission with such a high chance of failure. So it seems that we are so complacent and so risk-averse now, precisely because of too much management. We have to tell our kids that the iPad is a tool, not a solution.
Source:www.chessblog.com
 

 
 
 
2 comments:
Garry is Great!
Ajay..........
Golden words from kasparov!
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