Hello,
many years ago I had offered a 1,000-Euro prize
for the first program to beat the old MFoG (1998-
like version) at 29 handicap stone.
The offer ends on December 31, 2020.
So, this is a last call for those who
want to earn the money:
https://althofer.de/handicap-29-prize.html
Cheers,
Dear Hiroshi,
thank you for keeping us informed.
Cheeers, Ingo.
PS. Congrats to the "Golaxies"!
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Hello,
the final round of the codecentric Freestyle League
is over.
Here are the results:
AI Sensei - Chris the brain & friends 2-0
Karlsruher Allerlei - Oktgopus 1-1 (had been played on Sunday already)
Saargenhaft - DeepGreen 0-2
free: Oldenburger Ozas
And the final standings:
1. Oktgopus
Hi Steve,
> BTW: there's a fairly straightforward way to evaluate the skill
> level of the games on the whole.
Can you elaborate on that?
> Is there any interest in that, or just the results?
Of course I/we would like to have that.
I would even like to include that in the report on the
Hello,
the final round of the codecentric Freestyle League is scheduled
for Wednesday, April 24.
https://www.althofer.de/codecentric-freistil.html
However, the pairing that decides about the title, is
Karlsruhe - Paderborn,
and will start already on Sunday, April 21, 18:00 Central
European
Hi,
round 6 of the codecentric Freestyle League has been played.
Unfortunately, two of the teams forfeited their matches:
Karlsruhe - Oldenburg 2-0 (without fight)
Saarbruecken - Freiburg 2-0 (without fight)
However, the top pairing took place, and by some sort
of surprise, the Paderborn team
Dear Hiroshi,
thanks for your interesting recent postings on the AlphaZero paper(s).
I think referees told them to back their claims by more data.
So the paper has larger test runs than the arxiv preprint.
**
Indeed, our maioing list has a severy
Hello,
tension is grwoing high in the German Freestyle League.
Next Wednesday round 6 is played on KGS in room "Deutsch Ecke".
Spectators are welcome, with comments in any language.
Currently Paderborn (Oktgopus) is leading with 8:0,
ahead of Darmstadt and Karlsruhe (8:2 each).
The pairings in
Hello,
in particular to GCP and other LeelaZero developers,
currently the games of the European Pro tournament (in Jena)
are transmitted on KGS. Some users give LZ percentages, but ...
it seems that LZ does not give expected scores (and deviations)
for the game end.
(CrazyStone had such a feature
Saargenhaft (Saarbruecken) - AI Sensei (Hamburg) 0-2
DeepGreen (Darmstadt) - Oldenburger Ozas (Oldenburg) 2-0
Oktgopus (Paderborn) - Chris the brain & friends (Freiburg) 2-0
free in this round: Karlsruher Allerlei (Karlsruhe)
Table after round 5:
1. Oktgopus Paderborn 8-0
2. Karlsruher Allerlei
Hi,
recently, Leela-Chess-Zero has become very strong, playing
on the same level with Stockfish-10. Many of the test players
are puzzled, however, by the "phenomenon" that Lc0 tends to
need many many moves to transform an overwhelming advantage
into a mate.
Just today a new German tester
Hi,
Round 5 of the codecentric Freestyle League is about to start.
Each team consists of two accounts where computer and
human intelligence together play Go.
The pairings are
Saargenhaft (Saarbruecken) - AI Sensei (Hamburg)
DeepGreen (Darmstadt) - Oldenburger Ozas (Oldenburg)
Oktgopus
's playout is half. Because its net size is double.
> http://www.yss-aya.com/cgos/19x19/bayes.html
>
> Thanks,
> Hiroshi Yamashita
>
> On 2019/02/17 1:29, "Ingo Althöfer" wrote:
> > Hi Remi,
> > thanks you for the link.
> >
> > A few questions (to
Hi Remi,
thanks you for the link.
A few questions (to all who know something):
* How strong is the new ELF bot in comparison with Leela-Zero?
* How were komi values taken into account when analysing old go games with help
of ELF?
* How often does ELF propose moves played by AlphaGo (for
Hello,
a central quote from the Leela Github blog at
https://github.com/gcp/leela-zero/issues/2157
Gian-Carlo Pascutto wrote:
>> So, practically, I'll keep the current 256x40 running as
>> is, which probably has a (few?) month(s) to go with a last
>> learning rate drop or playout increase, at
Dear Hiroshi,
thanks for the information.
It seems that the archive of computer-go is down,
or is it even the whole server?
Cheers, Ingo.
> Gesendet: Montag, 17. Dezember 2018 um 11:01 Uhr
> Von: "Hiroshi Yamashita"
> An: computer-go@computer-go.org
> Betreff: [Computer-go] Computers wins
Hello,
I foound an interesting historical document.
Emanuel Lasker (1868-1941) was Chess World Champion
from 1894-1921. He also learnt Go in 1907/08 from
his name sake Edward Lasker in Berlin. In his auto-
biography ("Chess Secrets", from 1951) Edward Lasker
wrote this process, for a photo of
Round 3 ist done.
Here are the results:
Oktgopus (U Paderborn) - Saargenhaft (Saarbruecken) 2-0
Chris the brain & friends (Freiburg) - Karlsruher Allerlei (U Karlsruhe) 0-2
an epic battle, including long byoyomi drama.
Oldenburger Ozas - AI Sensei (Hamburg) 0-2
DeepGreen (Darmstadt) free.
Hello,
round 3 of the Freestylel-Go-League is ahead.
On Sunday, 02 December 2018 the pairing
Oktgopus (U Paderborn) - Saargenhaft (Saarbruecken)
takes place. Start at 20:00 h local time.
On Wednesday, 05 December 2018 the pairings
Chris the brain & friends (Freiburg) - Karlsruher Allerlei (U
Here are the results from round 2.
Chris the brain & friends - DeepGreen 0-2
Oldenburger Ozas - Saargenhaft 0-2 (by default)
AI Sensei - Karlsruher Allerlei 1-1
free: Oktgopus
Table after round 2:
1.-2. DeepGreen 3-1
1.-2. Karlsruher Allerlei 3-1
3. Oktgopus 2-0
4.-5. AI sensei 2-2
4.-5.
Hi,
round 2 of the the codecentric Freestyle League is ahead:
Start of play is on Wednesday, November 07, 2018,
on KGS in "Deutsche Ecke". The pairings are:
Chris the brain & friends - DeepGreen
Oldenburger Ozas - Saargenhaft
AI Sensei - Karlsruher Allerlei
free: Oktgopus
Starting time 20:30 h
Hi,
one week after round 1 of the codeccentric
Freestyle League I have sorted my thoughts.
Of course, I know only the team captains and
not their internal structures.
Until yesteday it was my opinion that there
are mainly three types of teams: outsiders,
boxes. and brains.
(This
Hi,
the first round of the Frestyle League was played last
Wednesday. Here are the reults:
Oldenburger Ozas - Oktgopus 0-2
AI Sensei - DeepGreen 1-1
Karlsruher Allerlei - Saargenhaft 2-0
bye: Chris the brain & friends
So Paderborn (=Oktgopus) and Karlsruhe are the first
two leaders in the
A preliminary website for the codecentric
Freistil-Liga 2018/19 is online now (in
German langugage).
https://www.althofer.de/codecentric-freistil.html
Cheers, Ingo.
> Gesendet: Mittwoch, 03. Oktober 2018 um 21:49 Uhr
> in the German Go scene an experimental team league
> will start next week.
Hello everybody,
in the German Go scene an experimental team league
will start next week. Here are the most important
parts of the rules:
"Freestyle" means that a team may use any sort of help:
hardware and software, human expertise, books, ...
Teams may even use Go bots in autonomous mode.
Hi,
just now at the EGC an exhibition game is running,
with transmission on Youtube:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e5OXzI6Vp8g
Team Black is Hayashi Kozo (6p) + LeelaZero
Team White is Manja Marz (European Women's Champion) + LeelaZero
LZ is operated by GCP.
Ingo.
Hello,
the Computer Olympiad 2018, organized by the ICGA, takes
place in Taipeh (Taiwan) and has started on July 07.
There is a record number of programs participating.
Here is a list of all registrations:
http://www.tcga.tw/icga-computer-olympiad-2018/en/#tsignup
Interestingly, Go 19x19 has
Hi Hiroshi,
thanks for all the information, in particular also
for the sgf of the top game.
And one question: Is there a real gap between
FineArt and Leela on the one hand and all the
other participants?
Cheers, Ingo.
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Hi Richard,
>> I think you meant "cross my fingers".
yes that is the American way to formulate is.
Our Chancellor, however, prefers "thumbs pressed".
Look here:
https://www.bz-berlin.de/data/uploads/2014/07/merkel_1404473813-768x432.jpg
In the photo, look at the single white Go stone
and
Dear Hiroshi,
thank you for spreading the news.
Please, keep us informed about the
results on this weekend. (As sign of thankyou I will press
my thumbs for the Japanese soccer team in the Wordchampionships.)
Cheers, Ingo.
> Gesendet: Donnerstag, 21. Juni 2018 um 20:33 Uhr
> Von: "Hiroshi
Hi,
Pair-Go with mixed human+computer teams seems to become
a fashion. In the forthcoming European Go Congress
(Pisa) there will be an exhibition game on August 08:
Manja Marz (European Women Champion) + LeelaZero
vs
Hayashi Kozo (6p, Japan) + LeelaZero
Gian-Carlo Pascutto will be present in
Hi,
in the European Go scene an interview with
Gian-Carlo Pascutto is going viral:
https://www.eurogofed.org/?id=205
Cheers, Ingo.
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Hi,
a friend sent me the following bit of information:
**
cronus has been open-sourced.
https://github.com/Tencent/PhoenixGo
**
Make something out of it!
Ingo.
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Hi Gian-Carlo,
> FYI, we were able to convert the Facebook network into Leela Zero
> format, which should make it a lot easier to play against or test with.
>
> https://github.com/gcp/leela-zero/releases
> https://github.com/gcp/leela-zero/issues/1329
Thanks for your information.
> > I
Hi,
unallowed computer help has become a hot topic
in the Go scene recently. It is not easy to check,
if a player is using computer help during his or
her online games.
On the next weekend, there is the North-American
qualifier tournament for the next Youth Go World
Championships:
Hello,
in the German computer go forum a link to this
message by the Facebook AI Research group was posted:
https://research.fb.com/facebook-open-sources-elf-opengo/
I think this action will speed up "the" development.
One personal quote from the acknowledgement paragraph
of that message:
> We
Hi GC,
thanks for the information, and thanks to user
sbf2000 for his work on 9x9.
I would like to learn the name of the honorable person,
but of course it is his or her right to stay anonymously.
> ... Leela Zero now tops
> the CGOS 9x9 list. This seems to be entirely the work of a single user
Hello,
there is a science conference within the
European Go Congress in Pisa. The exact date
is Wednesday, August 08, 2018, for the talks.
We got some high-calibre speakers. The program
can be found at:
https://egc2018.it/en/conference.html
**
One
Hi,
Leela Zero has won the exhibition game against HayLee this night.
Here are some links.
For replay on OGS:
https://online-go.com/game/12063810
logfiles of Leela Zero:
https://www.reddit.com/r/cbaduk/comments/84sbop/server_log_file_from_the_haylee_leela_zero_match/
Youtube video (73
Announcement by Hajin Lee aka Haylee:
https://www.facebook.com/gohaylee/posts/1471089503013875
Ingo.
Sorry for the many typos in my
Hawking posting. I was not concentrated
after that sad new.
___
Sad news:
Srephen Hawkings did today (on Pi Day).
RIP (rest in pi) !
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Hello,
Robot Frisbee Go is my great dream project.
Progress is slow, but in the meantime I was at
least able to clarify the origins of classic
Frisbee Go (without robots).
Things started in the year 2000 in the European
Go Congress in Strausberg (40 km east of Berlin).
Hi Darren,
> > but then it does not make sense to call that algorithm "rollout".
> > ...
>
> Speaking of which, why did people start calling them rollouts
> instead of playouts?
it comes from the Backgammon scene, where for instance
rungames in the endgame were estimated by dozens or
hundreds
Hi Dan, hi friends,
> There is actually no randomness in the algorithm, just like AlphaZero's...
but then it does not make sense to call that algorithm "rollout".
**
In general: when introducing a new name, care should
be taken that the name
Out of couriosity: Who are the programmers
behind Pegasus, Cronus, and Hercules?
(These three bots are in the top group
on CGOS.)
May they be different bots from the same group?
Are the authors from Greece?
Questions over questions ...
Ingo.
___
Hi Dan,
I find your definition of "Alpha-Beta rollouts" somewhat puzzling.
> Alpha-beta rollouts is like MCTS without playouts (as in
> AlphaZero), and something that can also do alpha-beta pruning.
I would instead define "Alpha-Beta rollout" in the following way:
You have a fast alpha-beta
Hi Remi, hi friends,
> For the moment, my main objective is shogi. I
> will participate in the World Computer Shogi
> Championship in May.
Good luck! Please, keep us informed when
the tournament is running.
> So I am developing a game-independent AlphaZero framework.
I am hoping several
Hello,
looking at boards of different sizes, may there
be some threshold d, such that the Zero approach
is in particular successfull for all boards larger
than dxd und less successfull for boards smaller
than dxd? Or does duccess increase gradually
with board size?
Second question: Go may also
Von: "David Doshay"
> Go is hard.
> Programming is hard.
>
> Programming Go is hard squared.
> ;^)
And that on square boards.
Mama mia!
;-) Ingo.
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Hello Hiroshi, hello friends,
a very interesting discussion. Thank you for all
your contributions.
> 19x19 policy is similar strength on 13x13 and 166 Elo weaker on 9x9.
> 9x9 policy is 390 Elo weaker on 13x13, and 491 Elo weaker on 19x19.
> It seems smaller board is more useless than bigger
Hello,
what is known about proper MCTS procedures for games
which do not only have wins and losses, but also draws
(like chess, Shogi or Go with integral komi)?
Should neural nets provide (win, draw, loss)-probabilities
for positions in such games?
Ingo.
Hi,
GCP wrote:
> ...
> > Of course, in the end, strength is the best way to tell that your
> > implementation is correct :)
>
> In other words, do not take "correct" as necessarily meaning "matching
> the published research".
Chrilly Donnninger, one of the computer chess gurus in the 1990's
Dear Brian,
thank you for your posting and for publishing
the MiniGo code.
> I'm happy to announce MiniGo is now open source.
> https://github.com/tensorflow/minigo
>
> We're ... aiming for a correct, very readable implementation
> of the AlphaGoZero algorithm and demonstration of Google
>
ni-jena.de
Main organizers:
Prof. Ingo Althöfer, University of Jena Prof.
Marc Oliver Rieger, University of Trier
Local organizing committee:
Carlo Metta, University of Florence
Prof. Mauri
Hello,
Ke Jie did play a second handicap game against Fine Art
and won convincingly (in 72 moves).
There is a translation of an interview given by him
at reddit:
https://www.reddit.com/r/baduk/comments/7suord/on_ke_jies_2_handicap_games/?st=jcuhzf2y=f5737baa
Most of all I like Ke Jie's words in
expert (indeed my rank,
mostly inactive, is about 18-kyu); but I feel more competent
on computer go questions ;-)
Ingo.
> Gesendet: Samstag, 20. Januar 2018 um 07:50 Uhr
> Von: "Ingo Althöfer" <3-hirn-ver...@gmx.de>
> [Computer-go] Breakthrough: FineArt beating Ke J
Dear Hideki,
> >So, were the handicap games played at "normal" komi values
> >(6,5 or 7,5 points) ?
>
> No, but "standard" 0.5 pts. Zen supports very wide range of
> komi; about -20 to +30 (mainly for the users of
> Tencho-no-Igo).
that is very interesting information.
In particular, because
Dear Hideki,
>>> On Yugen-no-ma, Nihonkiin's online Go site, many (mainly
>>> young) professionals have played more than 200 two-hc games
>>> against Zen and its winrate is greater than 70%, AFICR.
>
>>* Is that the "normal" Zen version, or one that is
>>specially tuned for handicap games?
>
Dear Hideki,
> >> On Yugen-no-ma, Nihonkiin's online Go site, many (mainly
> >> young) professionals have played more than 200 two-hc games
> >> against Zen and its winrate is greater than 70%, AFICR.
>
> ...
>
> Early December or late November, I remember but due to an
> accident. HC games
Hello,
Stefan Kaitschick just mentioned in the German
computer go forum that there exists a (new)
Youtube documentation on FineArt AI:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vHJ2BnFx8Ak
It is about 40 minutes long and has English subtitles.
Cheers, Ingo.
Hi Hideki,
thanks for your posting.
> On Yugen-no-ma, Nihonkiin's online Go site, many (mainly
> young) professionals have played more than 200 two-hc games
> against Zen and its winrate is greater than 70%, AFICR.
Very interesting information, and congratulations
to Zen's performance.
* Do
That is the new world:
Top computer programs are giving handicap to
(top) professional players!
"We" had the intention to have a handicap setting
with DeepZen against a Japanese Pro in the European
Go Congress in July/August 2018, but the Japanese
organisation of Professional Go Players did
Hello in the round,
it seems that Chinese company Tencent with their
Go project FineArt has achieved a fantastic breakthrough:
According to the website of the International Go Federation
the new version of FineArt has played 34 handicap games
against pro players, winning 30 of the games. Special
Dear Gian-Carlo,
many thanks for running your ZERO project in public.
For all others: I highly recommend reading Gian-Carlo's
fresh statement in the following link:
https://github.com/gcp/leela-zero/issues/591
Ingo.
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Hello in the round,
I am not sure how narrowly people from the list are
following the progress of Gian Carlo Pascutto's project
Zero Leela. Therefore, here are some impressions.
The project site is:
http://zero.sjeng.org/
Shortly before Christmas some guys in the German
Go mailing list claimed
Hello in the round,
I asked a Japanese friend how the DeepMind report
(on Chess and Shogi) was recepted in the Shogi scene.
Here are the central parts of his answer (given on Wednesday):
> Today, I just found a news on Alpha Zero in a Japanese
> common newspaper, Asahi Shinbun, reporting the
Dear Hiroshi,
thank you for the information. And please, keep
us informed also tomorrow.
Best regards, Ingo.
> Gesendet: Samstag, 09. Dezember 2017 um 10:36 Uhr
> Von: "Hiroshi Yamashita"
> An: computer-go@computer-go.org
> Betreff: [Computer-go] AI ryusei 2017 first day
Hi Jim,
> In 2002/Nov, I created a Go adaptation, Abchij, which
> I think might not be easily conquered by these
> algorithms. It's funny, I did so in anticipation of
> thwarting any sort of brute force algorithms that might
> emerge to "solve" Go as I hated how those were the
> solution to
> The AlphaZero paper shows it out-performs AlphaGoZero, but they are
> comparing to the 20-block, 3-day version. Not the 40-block, 40-day
> version that was even stronger.
> As papers rarely show failures, can we take it to mean they couldn't
> out-perform their best go bot, do you think? ...
>
"Joshua Shriver" asked:
> What about arimaa?
My personal impression: Arimaa should be rather easy for the
AlphaZero approach.
My questions:
* How well does the AlphaZero approach
perform in Non-zero-sum games?
(or in games with more than two players)
* How well does the
It seems, we are living in extremely
heavy times ...
I want to go to bed now and meditate for threee days.
> DeepMind makes strongest Chess and Shogi programs with AlphaGo Zero method.
> Mastering Chess and Shogi by Self-Play with a General Reinforcement Learning
> Algorithm
>
Hi,
for the traditional Go scene it is hard to
live in the period of the Alpha revolution.
Part of my process to cope with the changes is
to design some collages. Here is an example:
http://www.dgob.de/yabbse/index.php?action=dlattach;topic=5107.0;attach=6159;image
The German Go scene is just
Hi all,
currently a big duel in computer chess is taking place,
with Komodo and Houdini playing a 100-games match.
There was an in-depth interview with the programmers
(Mark Lefler and Larry Kaufman from Komodo, Robert Houdart
from Houdini; Nelson Hernandez being the moderator).
Buit is a long
Hello Stephan,
> Another option for your experiment might be to take the 72-hour-old
> network, but only retain the first layers, and initialize randomly the
> last layers.
yes, or many others. Not all of them have to be fantastic,
but when you/we get some experience and have a new try
every 3
Hi Petri,
"Petri Pitkanen"
>
>>But again: For instance, when a eight year old child starts
>>to play violin, is it helpful or not when it had played
>>say a trumpet before?
>
> It would be and this is well known in practice. Logic
> around the music is the same so
Hi Alvaro,
Von: "Álvaro Begué"
> The term you are looking for is "transfer learning":
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transfer_learning
thanks for that interesting hint.
However, it is not exactly what I am looking at.
My question was more in observing and
Hi Darren,
> Can I correctly rephrase your question as: if you take a well-trained
> komi 7.5 network, then give it komi 5.5 training data, will it adapt
> quickly, or would it be faster/better to start over from scratch? (From
> the point of view of creating a strong komi 5.5 program.) (?)
in
Hi Erik,
> No need for AlphaGo hardware to find out; any
> toy problem will suffice to explore different
> initialization schemes...
I know that.
My intention with the question is a different one:
I am thinking how humans are learning. Is it beneficial
to have learnt related - but different
AlphaGo Zero started with random values in
its neural net - and reached top level
within 72 hours.
Would it typically help or disrupt to start
instead with values that are non-random?
What I have in mind concretely:
Look at 19x19 Go with komi=5.5
In run A you start with random values in the net.
Hi Petr,
> What would you say is the current state-of-art game tree search for
> chess? That's a very unfamiliar world for me, to be honest all I really
> know is MCTS...
Stockfish is one of the top-three chess programs, and
it is open source. It is mainly iterative deepening
alpha-beta, but
Hi Magnus,
thanks also to you for your experiments.
In particular, I like you setting with integral komi.
Cheers, Ingo.
> Gesendet: Samstag, 11. November 2017 um 00:48 Uhr
> Von: valky...@phmp.se
> An: Computer-go@computer-go.org
> Betreff: [Computer-go] Update Odin Zero 9x9 Komi 7.
>
> Odin
Dear Petr,
many thanks for you experiments and your posting!
It is an important puzzle piece in understanding
Alpha-Zero.
Keep on with your good work.
Regards, Ingo.
> Gesendet: Freitag, 10. November 2017 um 01:47 Uhr
> Von: "Petr Baudis"
> An: computer-go@computer-go.org
>
For all who want to participate, here is the correct link:
http://www.gokgs.com/tournInfo.jsp?id=1127
Come on guys, it is THE FINAL!
The winner of the tournament will get a surprise price from me.
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"Petri Pitkanen" wrot:
> They are free to use in any attribution. Game score is a reflection of
> historical fact and hence not copyrightable.
"reflection of historical fact" concerns games that were played
in public. Over the decades, there were several
What shall I say?
Really impressive.
My congratulations to the DeepMind team!
> https://deepmind.com/blog/
> http://www.nature.com/nature/index.html
* Would the same approach also work for integral komi values
(with the possibility of draws)? If so, what would the likely
correct komi for 19x19
GCP wrote:
> Maybe we should stop inventing artificial differences and appreciate
> that the tools in our toolbox have become much sharper over the years.
Amen.
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Hi,
I recommend the very interesting thread
https://lifein19x19.com/viewtopic.php?f=18=14466=0
on this event at Life-in-19x19.
Cheeers, Ingo.
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Dear Hiroshi,
thank you for the results and the sgf data.
Congratulations to Zen team, including Hideki!
Cheers, Ingo.
> Gesendet: Donnerstag, 17. August 2017 um 11:12 Uhr
> Von: "Hiroshi Yamashita"
> An: computer-go@computer-go.org
> Betreff: Re: [Computer-go] CGI won
Dear Hiroshi,
thank you for our information.
Can you please keep us informed about the
results from the final tournament?
Thank you in advance,
Ingo.
> Gesendet: Donnerstag, 17. August 2017 um 02:59 Uhr
> Von: "Hiroshi Yamashita"
> An: computer-go@computer-go.org
> Betreff:
Hi Lukas,
if you have a friend in the European Go COngress in oberhof,
tell him to buy a copy for your. Special EGC prize is 30 Euro;
later it will be 34.
You friend would even have the chance to collect some autographs:
by Fan Hui, who will give talks on next Tuesday and Wednesday;
and by
Hello,
I was able to buy a copy of the brandnew book
"Invisible: The Games of AlphaGo", just yesterday
during the European Go Congress.
The book is paperback and has 272 pages. It was compiled,
edited, and translated by the Finnish pro player Antti Toermaenen.
Published by Hebsacker Verlag,
Hi Tristan,
nice to read from you.
All the best for your "new" Project!
Ingo.
> Gesendet: Mittwoch, 19. Juli 2017 um 21:43 Uhr
> Von: cazen...@ai.univ-paris8.fr
> An: "Patrick Bardou" , computer-go@computer-go.org
> Betreff: Re: [Computer-go] What architecture behind
Hello,
it seems that the KGS bot tournament did not start, yet.
What is the matter?
Ingo.
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Hi Hideki,
thank you for the information.
Unfortunately, I can not be in Leiden this time.
Please, give my greetings to the other participants,
to the organizers, and also to the participants in
the conference.
Best regards, Ingo.
> Gesendet: Samstag, 01. Juli 2017 um 07:11 Uhr
> Von: "Hideki
Hello,
first of all big thanks to those who fixed the recent problem
with this mailing list! And now for my annnouncement:
The European Go Congress 2017 will be held in Oberhof (Thuringia),
from July 22 to August 06. I am helping in the organisation
team.
On Wednesday, August 02, there will be
Hi, just my 2 Cent.
"Gian-Carlo Pascutto" wrote:
> In the attached SGF, AlphaGo played P10, which was considered a very
> surprising move by all commentators...
> I can sort-of confirm this:
>
> 0.295057654 (E13)
> ...(60 more moves follow)...
> 0.11952 (P10)
>
> So,
Hi Aja,
will you also enjoy the games or will it be
distress for you?
Ingo.
PS. Concerning concerns of the others:
It would be fine to have (near)-realtime capture of the games
on KGS.
***
Gesendet: Freitag, 19. Mai 2017 um
ith one GPU.
> So maybe around 4169 + 250 = 4300.
>
> Zen19X is +800 Elo stronger, and its winrate is about 99%.
>
> Thanks,
> Hiroshi Yamashita
>
> - Original Message -
> From: ""Ingo Althöfer"" <3-hirn-ver...@gmx.de>
> To: &l
Hi Hideki,
thanks for the explannation.
So, Aya was already too far ahead.
Zen had two more games against Aya in the rounds 5-12 -
and won both of them. What do you think about
the playing strengths of Zen and Aya in comparison?
Cheers, Ingo.
> Gesendet: Dienstag, 09. Mai 2017 um 10:31 Uhr
>
Ui, what happened to Zen in the first four rounds?
https://www.gokgs.com/tournEntrants.jsp?sort=s=1113
Ingo.
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