"lee sedol needs to do something special," said one commentator. "otherwise, it’s just not going to be enough." but after considering his next move for a good 30 minutes, he delivered something special. it was move 78, a "wedge" play in the middle of the board, and it immediately...
It was move 78, when Lee Sedol played a "wedge" in the middle of the board. "It was the move that made [the game] the most complicated," Andrew Jackson, who was doing a separate online commentary for the US Go Association, later told me. And this added degree of complication ...
AlphaGo responded to the unexpected move with a weak counter, which set off a brilliant sequence from Lee to capitalise. According to Demis Hassabis, one of DeepMind’s founders, AlphaGo didn’t realise its mistake until eight moves later. “Lee Sedol beat AlphaGo at its own game,” ...
For Lee, that included ___77___ a surprisingly difficult move called The Nabieva. It was ___78___ after the woman, Tatiana Olegovna Nabieva, who introduced the move. It ___79___ “laying out vertically over the high bar, swinging around, and then passing over the bar backwards be...
It's worth spending some time to reflect carefully on this situation.];W[qc](;B[re]LB[qc:36][re:37]C[Extending at Black 37 seems natural in this situation, but Lee Sedol's brilliant strategy in the game revealed this move to be questionable later on.The explanation of why Black 37...
also seemed that a second moment of genius was an awful lot to expect from lee sedol. at the hour-and-twenty-minute mark, alphago made what the commentators saw as a rather weak move, and this sparked talk of another sudden collapse. "are we seeing another short circuit?" asked the ...