Chess News
A new chess AI utilizes a neural network to approach the millions of possible moves in the game without just throwing compute cycles
at the problem the way that most chess engines have done since Von
Neumann.
'Giraffe' returns to the practical problems which defeated
chess researchers who tried to create less 'systematic' opponents in the
mid-1990s, and came up against the (still present) issues of latency
and branch resolution in search.
Invented by an MSc student at Imperial
College London, Giraffe taught itself chess and reached FIDE International Master level on a modern mainstream PC within three days.
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