Magicwand wrote:how do i play this Zen program...????
i need some instruction to play this Zen
Look for Zen in the the computer go room on KGS
Magicwand wrote:how do i play this Zen program...????
i need some instruction to play this Zen
Satorian wrote:I do wonder if IBM could crack human Go superiority if Zen was ported to the Watson hardware.
For this challenge, Zen ran on 12 cores at 4.2 GHz. Watson has 720 cores at 3.5 GHz. Granted, the instruction sets differ between CPU architectures and there are going to be some challenges and decreasing efficiency at that networking scale, but if MCTS scales in a linear manner with computing power, that would make for a very interesting bout with some high Dan players.
Satorian wrote:......
For this challenge, Zen ran on 12 cores at 4.2 GHz. Watson has 720 cores at 3.5 GHz. ........
Mike Novack wrote: We shouldn't assume that another 60 fold increase would be worth a similar few stones. Likewise, as we decreased crunch power we would reach a place on the curve where the change of playing strength with crunch was very rapid (below a minimum amount, the algorithm would work very poorly if at all).
Suji wrote:The humans may have lost this battle, but I believe that on any hardware top professionals will kill the program in an even game. In 20 years, who knows who'll win. Humanity will eventually lose to the top programs.
Mike Novack wrote:Suji wrote:The humans may have lost this battle, but I believe that on any hardware top professionals will kill the program in an even game. In 20 years, who knows who'll win. Humanity will eventually lose to the top programs.
I sort of agree with the conclusion but not because of expected improvement in crunch power. Twenty years is a relatively long time in terms of the conceptual advances that have taken place in the programs. I don't expect that the MCTS programs will directly improve that much but we might have another breakthrough or a clever trick using MCTS to greater advantage.
Satorian wrote:Interesting replies.
Can somebody explain the jump in AI quality that's been achieved going from Deep Blue to the 2006 defeat of Kramnik against Fritz on what was quite modest hardware?
Suji wrote:In 20 years, who knows who'll win. Humanity will eventually lose to the top programs.
I'm gonna start teaching my daughter go early so I can reach 9 danMivo wrote:Suji wrote:In 20 years, who knows who'll win. Humanity will eventually lose to the top programs.
Clever programmers (human) will beat top players (human).
Suji wrote: As of right now, chess engines are probably generally stronger than the best humans.
Mivo wrote:Suji wrote:In 20 years, who knows who'll win. Humanity will eventually lose to the top programs.
Clever programmers (human) will beat top players (human).
Kirby wrote:Though I am human, it is interesting to ponder how my brain works. Am I really capable of any cleverness from within, or is it all a result of my brain having been programmed?