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This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Joey Votto now has his own bot on Chess.com. Here's how to play it ...
A new computer program taught itself how to play chess, go and shogi AIs have defeated humans at even more computationally difficult games.
If you’ve ever played chess or even checkers, you’ve probably thought about making a board that lets a computer play you without having to enter your moves and look at the board on a screen ...
The world of chess has been going through somewhat of an evolution in recent years, and it’s showing no signs of slowing down ...
A computer made from DNA that can solve basic chess and sudoku puzzles could one day, if scaled up, save vast amounts of energy over traditional computers when it comes to tasks like training ...
Yiming Zhang didn't grow up playing chess. Like many other people, the Carnegie Mellon University Ph.D. student discovered ...
Twenty-four years ago on Monday, a world chess champion came up against a force too great to overcome: a computer. Garry Kasparov lost the first game of a six-game match on February 10, 1996 ...
In 2017, AlphaZero showed it could teach itself to roundly beat the best computer players at either chess, Go, or the Japanese game shogi. Kramnik says its latest results reveal beguiling new ...