AlphaGo forever!
DeepMind and Google, not so much.
They said these 50 were self-play with long time limits so presumably stronger play, whereas the millions of games used for training the networks were faster and thus potentially weaker and embarrassing. Nevertheless, it sure would have been nice to see some 3 stone handicap games between AlphaGo Lee and Master versions (Aja confirmed on facebook they did actually play with 3 stones, it wasn't a proxy for win percentage).ez4u wrote:Meanwhile on the original topic of the release of 50 self-played games (out of a hundred million or so).
Yeah, I don't really buy that argument myselfez4u wrote:Ask yourself how likely it is that the program played a hundred million silly, embarrassing games against itself and then suddenly transcended to the AlphaGo that we see today.
Edit: wrong, I missed white problem in centre.billyswong wrote:Hi, I am new here. May anyone help me on the game 20? Its official result is B+resign. However, when I try to play out the end game moves and see how close things are (inside the deepmind website), it ends up at "White wins by 0.5 points" showing in front of me. Is it that I played some moves wrong?
White also needs one defensive move inside on the left. Thus my W+0.5 result.Uberdude wrote:Very good point. I think in fact it should be White wins by 1.5, because he can get 2 of the 3 available gote dame: the 2 on the left are simple sente atari dame, and on the right side black needs 2 defensive moves inside. Did white AlphaGo not realise this and thus resigned a won game?! I also note there are a lot of captures and white has more than black, another possible source of bugs.billyswong wrote:Hi, I am new here. May anyone help me on the game 20? Its official result is B+resign. However, when I try to play out the end game moves and see how close things are (inside the deepmind website), it ends up at "White wins by 0.5 points" showing in front of me. Is it that I played some moves wrong?
Attached is how I see this game played out till the very end. Black wins by 0.5. That's why white resigned and you can see quite often in these 50 games that one resigns because the opponent was leading by a very small margin of 0.5 or 1.5.Uberdude wrote:Very good point. I think in fact it should be White wins by 1.5, because he can get 2 of the 3 available gote dame: the 2 on the left are simple sente atari dame, and on the right side black needs 2 defensive moves inside so white gets both those dame. Did white AlphaGo not realise this and thus resigned a won game?! I also note there are a lot of captures and white has more than black, another possible source of bugs.billyswong wrote:Hi, I am new here. May anyone help me on the game 20? Its official result is B+resign. However, when I try to play out the end game moves and see how close things are (inside the deepmind website), it ends up at "White wins by 0.5 points" showing in front of me. Is it that I played some moves wrong?
None of this ...Uberdude wrote:Very good point. I think in fact it should be White wins by 1.5, because he can get 2 of the 3 available gote dame: the 2 on the left are simple sente atari dame, and on the right side black needs 2 defensive moves inside so white gets both those dame. Did white AlphaGo not realise this and thus resigned a won game?! I also note there are a lot of captures and white has more than black, another possible source of bugs.billyswong wrote:Hi, I am new here. May anyone help me on the game 20? Its official result is B+resign. However, when I try to play out the end game moves and see how close things are (inside the deepmind website), it ends up at "White wins by 0.5 points" showing in front of me. Is it that I played some moves wrong?
I noticed that, too. For example game #39 is very similar in this regard.johnsmith wrote:Black wins by 0.5. That's why white resigned and you can see quite often in these 50 games that one resigns because the opponent was leading by a very small margin of 0.5 or 1.5.
Seems like that, at least for the endgame. We've seen several examples (e.g. game #1 against Ke Jie). Although AlphaGo "throws away" several points in exchange for higher win probability (the way it defines it) it has complete control about the outcome from several moves back.Edit: AlphaGO does NEVER make mistakes!
I doubt if AlphaGo will drop a point in the late endgame, because of its reading ability. However, what it means by win probability is, AFAIK, unknown, even to its developers. (Because it depends in large part on what the evaluation network has learned.)Baywa wrote:Seems like that, at least for the endgame. We've seen several examples (e.g. game #1 against Ke Jie). Although AlphaGo "throws away" several points in exchange for higher win probability (the way it defines it) it has complete control about the outcome from several moves back.johnsmith wrote:AlphaGO does NEVER make mistakes!
I have taken a look at the end of game 31. Neither player dropped a point (that I found), and the play of the approach ko in the top left corner was impressive.Actually, in this series of selfplays it could be interesting to see how hard and close the endgames were fought. The close final score may not tell the whole story.
I am quite sure AlphaGo can do that. Remember those unofficial games played online in the name of "Master" this January?Bill Spight wrote: Can AlphaGo solve it in 45 seconds? Maybe so, but I'll believe it when I see it.![]()
Wikipedia wrote: All 60 games except one were fast paced games with three 20 or 30 seconds byo-yomi. Master offered to extend the byo-yomi to one minute when playing with Nie Weiping in consideration of his age.