Ce soir au club de go de Strasbourg, Motoki Sensei nous a fait l'honneur de nous commenter un partie du XVIe siècle du 1er Meijin (littéralement «homme brillant») Hon'inbō Sansa — si ma mémoire est bonne. C'était passionnant de voir comment la façon de jouer à ce jeu millénaire à évolué dans le temps : certaines séquences d'anciens maîtres paraissent aujourd'hui désuètes car peu optimales, tandis que d'autres ne pas perdu de leur superbe !
> The tactics used by Pelrine involved slowly stringing together a large “loop” of stones to encircle one of his opponent’s own groups, while distracting the AI with moves in other corners of the board. The Go-playing bot did not notice its vulnerability, even when the encirclement was nearly complete, Pelrine said.
> “It shows once again we’ve been far too hasty to ascribe superhuman levels of intelligence to machines,” Russell said.
🏁 Well, I just finished this 19×19 go course on Go Magic with a 86% grade! I feel like I’ve understood a lot of new subtleties and consolidated some of my skills. I highly recommend it!
⚫ As I had promised myself, I just registered for the 12th Strasbourg International Go Tournament 2024! It will be my first go tournament ever, so I’m both scared and excited, but I still have 5 months to improve my game.
It makes me so happy when I see scenes in films or series where the characters are playing go — especially when the stones aren’t just randomly placed ⚫⚪
The game of Go has no hidden information, it's just so complex that the human mind cannot comprehend it all at once. I think that's what makes it so beautiful. The rules are as simple as they possibly can be. At the same time, there is practically no limit to improving in it. #go#baduk#igo#gameofgo#gogame#complexity
Someone talk to me about Go (the board game). I'm in the process of learning it right now. (lemmy.world)