The Amazing Chebanenko Slav || Vladimir Kramnik vs Alexei Shirov || Vienna Millenium 1996

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  • čas přidán 27. 08. 2020
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    FIDE CM Kingscrusher goes over The Amazing Chebanenko Slav || Vladimir Kramnik vs Alexei Shirov || Vienna Millenium 1996
    ♚ Free short and sweet course: kingscrusher.tv/ChebSlav
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    FIDE CM Kingscrusher goes over amazing games of Chess every day, with a focus recently on chess champions such as Magnus Carlsen or even games of Neural Networks which are opening up new concepts for how chess could be played more effectively.
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    Info about Leela Zero:
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leela_Zero
    ...
    Leela Chess Zero (lc0) is a free, open-source, and neural network-based chess engine and distributed computing project.
    Leela Zero's algorithm is based on DeepMind's 2017 paper about AlphaGo Zero.[3][6] Unlike the original Leela, which has a lot of human knowledge and heuristics programmed into it, Leela Zero only knows the basic rules and nothing more.[7]
    Leela Zero is trained by a distributed effort, which is coordinated at the Leela Zero website. Members of the community provide computing resources by running the client, which generates self-play games and submits them to the server. The self-play games are used to train newer networks. Generally, over 500 clients have connected to the server to contribute resources.[7] The community has provided high quality code contributions as well.[7]
    Leela Zero finished third at the BerryGenomics Cup World AI Go Tournament in Fuzhou, Fujian, China on 28 April 2018.[8]
    Info about Alphazero:
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AlphaZero
    AlphaZero is a computer program developed by the Alphabet-owned AI research company DeepMind, which uses an approach similar to AlphaGo Zero's to master not just Go, but also chess and shogi. On December 5, 2017 the DeepMind team released a preprint introducing AlphaZero, which, within 24 hours, achieved a superhuman level of play in these three games by defeating world-champion programs, Stockfish, elmo, and the 3-day version of AlphaGo Zero, in each case making use of custom tensor processing units (TPUs) that the Google programs were optimized to make use of.[1] AlphaZero was trained solely via "self-play" using 5,000 first-generation TPUs to generate the games and 64 second-generation TPUs to train the neural networks, all in parallel, with no access to opening books or endgame tables. After just four hours of training, DeepMind estimated AlphaZero was playing at a higher Elo rating than Stockfish; after 9 hours of training, the algorithm decisively defeated Stockfish 8 in a time-controlled 100-game tournament (28 wins, 0 losses, and 72 draws).[1][2][3] The trained algorithm played on a single machine with four TPUs.
    ...
    Relation to AlphaGo Zero
    Further information: AlphaGo Zero
    AlphaZero (AZ) is a more generalized variant of the AlphaGo Zero (AGZ) algorithm, and is able to play shogi and chess as well as Go. Differences between AZ and AGZ include:[1]
    AZ has hard-coded rules for setting search hyperparameters.
    The neural network is now updated continually.
    Go (unlike Chess) is symmetric under certain reflections and rotations; AlphaGo Zero was programmed to take advantage of these symmetries. AlphaZero is not.
    Chess can end in a draw unlike Go; therefore AlphaZero can take into account the possibility of a drawn game.
    AlphaZero vs. Stockfish and elmo
    ...
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Komentáře • 7

  • @kingscrusher
    @kingscrusher  Před 3 lety

    ♚ Free short and sweet course: kingscrusher.tv/ChebSlav

  • @gregp.4358
    @gregp.4358 Před rokem

    Very interesting video!

  • @joseraulcapablanca8564

    Fire on Board. great to see. Fine analysis, thanks KC and once again a happy birthday to you.

  • @paulbloemen7256
    @paulbloemen7256 Před 3 lety

    Interesting opening! Would AI-Zero choose it if it was allowed to decide upon its moves right from the start?

  • @MEME-qe4ze
    @MEME-qe4ze Před 3 lety +1

    Shirov is no chump my friends.

  • @martinmartin6300
    @martinmartin6300 Před 3 lety

    If you win in the midgame you do not even need to do the endgame:D

  • @richardfredlund3802
    @richardfredlund3802 Před 3 lety

    rare to see black play for a win like that, at such a high level.