The new artificial neural network taught itself to master the ancient game Go within weeks, without any tips from humans. Eric Mack has been a CNET contributor since 2011. Eric and his family live 100 ...
Google's DeepMind lab has built an artificially intelligent program that taught itself to become one of the world's most dominant Go players. Google says the program, AlphaGo Zero, endowed itself with ...
The computer that stunned humanity by beating the best mortal players at a strategy board game requiring “intuition” has become even smarter, its creators claim ...
Over the last few days, an unknown Go player named “Master” has won 60 of 61 online matches against some of the best players in the world. Google has now fessed-up, admitting that “Master” is actually ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. AlphaGo is going out on top. After beating Ke Jie, the world’s best player of the ancient Chinese board game Go, ...
Google’sAlphaGo on Tuesday rocked the worlds of Go and artificial intelligence when it beat 18-time international Go champion Lee Se-dol the final round of the Google DeepMind Challenge. DeepMind ...
Research at Google on Wednesday announced that AlphaGo has become the first computer software system to beat a human at the ancient game of Go. There are more possible positions in Go than there are ...
Go is a Chinese board game that dates back thousands of years. There are more possible Go moves than there are atoms in the universe so it's been incredibly tough for machines to crack Go. The AlphaGo ...
Google's AI star, AlphaGo, wins again. It bested Ke Jie, the world's best Go player, by just half a point -- the closest margin possible. After the match, Google's DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis ...
Google's AlphaGo already beat us puny humans to become the best at the Chinese board game of Go. Now, it's done with humans altogether. DeepMind, the Alphabet subsidiary behind the artificial ...
For those keeping score at home, the machines are beating us — literally. On Tuesday, Google’s A.I. program, AlphaGo, defeated the world’s best player at, well, Go. Humans have been playing Go, a ...