Ingo Althofer:
:
>Hi Rémi,
>
>thanks for the very interesting link.
>
>It seems that a race for a new breakthrough is open.
>Let's see if Abakus or Aya or CrazyStone or
>FaceGo or GoogleGo or Zen or some other bot
>will become the winner.
Exciting. A new program ponanGo will attend the comming U
I'm due for a sabbatical in the 2016-2017 academic year. If the humans are
still standing, I'll continue work on Go. If not, I'll spend it finding a
new research topic.
So ... if y'all could just crack this grand challenge problem in the next
few months, that'd be great. :-)
On Mon, Dec 7, 2015 a
Hi Rémi,
thanks for the very interesting link.
It seems that a race for a new breakthrough is open.
Let's see if Abakus or Aya or CrazyStone or
FaceGo or GoogleGo or Zen or some other bot
will become the winner.
Great times.
Will we see bots on par with top humans before 2020?
Ingo.
__
On a site note, I really feel bad for Kasparov. Seems like anytime
there is a human vs computer game match the news always brings up Deep
Blue. It has to feel bad to always see your name time and time again
be used as a "loser" instead of the remarkable an legendary chess
player he is.
Just my $0
My money is on Google they already have a lot of algo's for pattern
matching and analysis. Will be interesting to see how this pans out.
Nice link :)
-Josh
On Mon, Dec 7, 2015 at 11:37 AM, Rémi Coulom wrote:
> http://www.wired.com/2015/12/google-and-facebook-race-to-solve-the-ancient-game-of-go