In 2016, the world watched in awe as AlphaGo, an artificial intelligence program developed by Google DeepMind, defeated Lee Sedol, one of the greatest Go players in history. Go, a game of seemingly infinite complexity, had always been a bastion of human intuition and creativity — the one arena machines were thought unable to conquer. Yet in just five games, AlphaGo did more than win; it revealed a new kind of intelligence. Its now-legendary move 37 stunned experts not because it was logical, ...
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In 2016, the world watched in awe as AlphaGo, an artificial intelligence program developed by Google DeepMind, defeated Lee Sedol, one of the greatest Go players in history. Go, a game of seemingly infinite complexity, had always been a bastion of human intuition and creativity — the one arena machines were thought unable to conquer. Yet in just five games, AlphaGo did more than win; it revealed a new kind of intelligence. Its now-legendary move 37 stunned experts not because it was logical, ...
The Birth of AI: Dreams, Winters, and Breakthroughs with Smriti Kirubanandan
AI Forward
9 minutes
1 month ago
The Birth of AI: Dreams, Winters, and Breakthroughs with Smriti Kirubanandan
It’s the summer of 1956. On the quiet campus of Dartmouth College in New Hampshire, a small group of scientists gathered around chalkboards, buzzing with excitement. Their mission? To answer one of humanity’s boldest questions: Can machines think? That summer workshop, now known as the Dartmouth Conference, marked the official birth of artificial intelligence. It was here the very term “AI” was coined, and the dream of building machines that could learn, reason, and even converse took root. B...
AI Forward
In 2016, the world watched in awe as AlphaGo, an artificial intelligence program developed by Google DeepMind, defeated Lee Sedol, one of the greatest Go players in history. Go, a game of seemingly infinite complexity, had always been a bastion of human intuition and creativity — the one arena machines were thought unable to conquer. Yet in just five games, AlphaGo did more than win; it revealed a new kind of intelligence. Its now-legendary move 37 stunned experts not because it was logical, ...