That time Blue won quickly, Kasparov basically announced to the world that he had been 'on tilt' (not his words, but that's what he meant) and didn't play his A game.
WildBill - the trouble with AI is it will eventually be able to tell when you have 'caught on' and change its strategy. As it is, the VexBot will undoubtedly have some game theory built into it to keep it unpredictable.
Think about how much computers have come on in the last few decades.. Think about what they will be capable of in another five, then, twenty years... If you aren't scared and/or thrilled, you aren't thinking far ahead enough
Moore's law is still pretty applicable. He said (paraphrasing) that computing power would double every year. This law has held for quite some time, but in the future we will be seeing scalability breakthroughs which uncouple us from the theoretical boundaries of the tehnology we use today.
By Moore's law (which I think is pessimistic, going forward), in 10 years you computer will have over a THOUSAND times more power that it does today. I'm quite convinced that this power will be adequate to beat humans at any/all games.
BTW Big Blue is not 'intelligent' as far as I know - it just 'brute forces' game scenarios, i.e. it calculates all possible combinations of moves to the finish from its current point and selects the best one.
This post turned out far longer than I had intended. Apologies.