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Google Inc.’s computer program AlphaGo defeated its human opponent, South Korean Go champion Lee Sedol, on Wednesday in the first face-off of a historic five-game match.
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 ...
Google’s AlphaGo won the first of three planned games this week against Ke Jie, a 19-year-old prodigy, in this town west of Shanghai. The computer will also face other top-ranked Chinese players ...
Google has made noises about returning to China, where it still operates some offices, and this week's AlphaGo match seemed like a chance to reboot its presence. But in China, the politics are ...
In 2015, Google revealed its 'god-like' AlphaGo artificial intelligence system - the first computer program to defeat a world champion at the ancient Chinese game of Go.
Google's AlphaGo beat Go world champion Ke Jie for a second time in as many days, taking an unassailable lead in the three-part series. By rights, ...
Achievement Unlocked: Google AlphaGo A.I. Wins Go Series, 4-1 : The Two-Way A top world Go champ lost the last of five games against Google's AlphaGo. But both sides are going home from the match ...
On March 19, 2016, the strongest Go player in the world, Lee Sedol, sits down for a game against Google DeepMind’s artificial-intelligence program, AlphaGo. They’re at the Four Seasons Hotel ...
Google's AlphaGo isn't taking over the world, yet Max Taves Staff Reporter Max writes about venture capitalism and startups while seeking out the new new thing to come out of Silicon Valley.
Google's researchers used a "reinforcement learning" scheme to make AlphaGo Zero intelligent enough to learn on its own. Using a deep neural network — which is an artificial model of how human ...