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In the latest round of man versus machine, machine has come out on top. Google's AlphaGo beat Go world champion Ke Jie for a second time in as many days, taking an unassailable lead in the three ...
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.
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 Go-playing AI is going head-to-head in China against the world's best player. But inside the country, you can't get much of a view of the match.
Researchers from Google's London-based DeepMind have unveiled the new AlphaGo Zero system in a study published in Nature today.
In a Nature study, Google showed that its AlphaGo Zero program trained itself to beat the world's best Go players without assistance from humans.
A top world Go champ lost the last of five games against Google's AlphaGo. But both sides are going home from the match with a lot more to learn.
In defeating Lee 4-1, DeepMind, the British startup acquired by Google in 2014 and developer of AlphaGo, achieved something that many computer scientists believed would be decades away. But the ...
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.
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 The machine beat world champion Lee Sedol at Go, but computers still remain way behind humans at pretty much everything other than crunching data.
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