IBM Research has spent four years building a computer named Watson that can challenge the best "Jeopardy" players of all time--and maybe even beat them.
Caroline McCarthy
Caroline McCarthy, a CNET News staff writer, is a downtown Manhattanite happily addicted to social-media tools and restaurant blogs. Her pre-CNET resume includes interning at an IT security firm and brewing cappuccinos.
The stage is set: An auditorium in IBM Research's headquarters in Yorktown Heights, N.Y., has been transformed into a stage for the IBM Jeopardy Challenge this weekend, which pits Jeopardy champions Brad Rutter (who holds the record for most money won on the game) and Ken Jennings (who won the most consecutive "Jeopardy" games) against Watson, a computer with the ability to process complex language queries.
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Filling the room
A host of print and broadcast press were on hand for a test match today between Jennings, Rutter, and Watson.
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John E. Kelly III
John E. Kelly III, IBM senior vice president and director of IBM Research, introduces Thursday's "Jeopardy" match.
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The room was mystified
The room was mystified by Watson's question-and-answer skills and how well he held up against two notoriously knowledge-packed and experienced game show contestants.
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David Ferrucci
David Ferrucci, the principal investigator of the Watson project at IBM Research, was in charge of building DeepQA, the technology that powers the computer.
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The champions and challenger
"Jeopardy" champions Ken Jennings (left) and Brad Rutter stand on either side of a video screen connected to the Watson computer, which is housed in a space underneath the auditorium.
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The test game
Jimmy McGuire, a "Jeopardy" crew member who handles the television show's rehearsal game, quizzes Jennings, Rutter, and Watson on topics as varied as female archaeologists and notable children's books.
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Alex Trebek joins the crew
"Jeopardy" host Alex Trebek (far left) with (from left) "Jeopardy" executive producer Harry Friedman, champions Brad Rutter and Ken Jennings, and IBM Research's David Ferrucci and John E. Kelly III.
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The robots defeated them
Brad Rutter and Ken Jennings were good-natured after failing to beat Watson the computer in a quick test match this morning--but the score was very close.
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Meet Watson
Underneath the auditorium where the IBM Jeopardy Challenge took place is Watson, the question-and-answer machine. Named for IBM founder Thomas J. Watson, the machine otherwise just looks like an innocuous data center.