March 24, 2020
What AlphaGo is doing is essentially cutting down
So proud of the team!â€AlphaGo had made history in October, by becoming the
first computer program ever to beat a human professional player at the ancient
Asian game, which many experts consider to be the most fiendishly complicated of
its kind."I didn’t think AlphaGo would play the game in such a perfect manner,â€
he told reporters after the match. But 33-year-old compound
film filling machines Factory Lee, a much more challenging opponent, was
considered a bigger hurdle for a machine to vanquish.
I would like to express
my respect to the programmers for making such an amazing program."Today’s win is
symbolic, but nevertheless a very important step,†said Jang Woo-seok, a
research fellow at the Hyundai Research Institute.â€Google executives say Go
offers too many possible moves for a machine to win simply through brute-force
calculations, unlike chess, in which IBM's Deep Blue famously beat former world
champion Garry Kasparov in 1997.South Korean professional player Lee Sedol, the
holder of 18 international titles, conceded defeat in a match broadcast live,
with one YouTube stream drawing tens of thousands of spectators worldwide, while
domestic television gave frequent updates.Google’s AlphaGo computer program on
Wednesday won the first of five matches against one of the world’s top players
of a complex board game, Go, marking a dramatic advance for the field of
artificial Google’s AlphaGo computer program on Wednesday won the first of five
matches against one of the world’s top players of a complex board game, Go,
marking a dramatic advance for the field of artificial intelligence (AI).
What
AlphaGo is doing is essentially cutting down the number of potential moves to
consider.Experts did not expect an artificial intelligence program to beat a
human professional for at least a decade, until AlphaGo’s victory last year over
player Fan Hui..â€Go, most popular in countries such as China, South Korea and
Japan, involves two contestants moving black and white stones on a square grid,
with the aim of seizing the most territory."We landed on the moon,†Demis
Hassabis, chief executive and co-founder of Google subsidiary DeepMind, which
built AlphaGo, said in a tweet after the victory.Lee expressed surprise at his
loss
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