Chess
in sentence
295 examples of Chess in a sentence
And all of a sudden, what we're doing is we've got this multidimensional
chess
board where we can change human genetics by using viruses to attack things like AIDS, or we can change the gene code through gene therapy to do away with some hereditary diseases, or we can change the environment, and change the expression of those genes in the epigenome and pass that on to the next generations.
When Deep Blue beat the world's best
chess
champion, people thought it was the end of
chess.
But actually, it turns out that today, the best
chess
champion in the world is not an AI.
The situation resembles an adversarial game like
chess
– only here you can’t see the opponent’s position.
Then 45 years later, in 1997, Deep Blue beats Kasparov at
chess.
2011, Watson beats these two humans at Jeopardy, which is much harder for a computer to play than
chess
is.
The best
chess
players spend a lot of time not playing games of chess, which would be their performance zone, but trying to predict the moves grand masters made and analyzing them.
The actions of this White House, the early actions on climate, are just the first move in a complex game of climate
chess.
And three, thinking of this analogy of chess, the big decision up ahead is: Does the administration stay in Paris?
And in 1997, I was still the world champion when
chess
computers finally came of age.
It turned out that
chess
could be crunched by brute force, once hardware got fast enough and algorithms got smart enough.
Although by the definition of the output, grandmaster-level chess, Deep Blue was intelligent.
Was my beloved game of
chess
over?
[John Henry Died with a Hammer in His Hand Palmer C. Hayden] [The Museum of African American Art, Los Angeles] It turned out that the world of
chess
still wanted to have a human
chess
champion.
And even today, when a free
chess
app on the latest mobile phone is stronger than Deep Blue, people are still playing chess, even more than ever before.
Advanced
Chess
found its home on the internet, and in 2005, a so-called freestyle
chess
tournament produced a revelation.
The winners were a pair of amateur American
chess
players operating three ordinary PCs at the same time.
Their skill of coaching their machines effectively counteracted the superior
chess
knowledge of their grandmaster opponents and much greater computational power of others.
Our humanity is not defined by any skill, like swinging a hammer or even playing
chess.
Imagine that you are in Las Vegas, in a casino, and you decide to play a game on one of the casino's computers, just like you might play solitaire or
chess.
So what that means is, you're never going to be able to build a computer to win at the game of Go the way
chess
was approached, for example, which is basically to throw brute-force computational power at it.
CA: I mean, Gary Kasparov said on the first day [of TED2017] that the winners of chess, surprisingly, turned out to be two amateur
chess
players with three mediocre-ish, mediocre-to-good, computer programs, that could outperform one grand master with one great
chess
player, like it was all part of the process.
It can't even play
chess.
People think you can improve it through brain-training iPhone apps and computer games, or by practicing it in a specific way, like playing
chess.
And whether we are creating these revolving giant
chess
piece time tunnels for an opera by Richard Wagner or shark tanks and mountains for Kanye West, we're always seeking to create the most articulate sculpture, the most poetic instrument of communication to an audience.
I played a lot of
chess.
That player started hitting the ball back with his left hand and dictating
chess
moves between shots.
Over the roughly one-and-a-half millennia of its existence,
chess
has been known as a tool of military strategy, a metaphor for human affairs, and a benchmark of genius.
While our earliest records of
chess
are in the 7th century, legend tells that the game’s origins lie a century earlier.
But with its spread to Sassanid Persia, it acquired its current name and terminology– "chess," derived from "shah," meaning king, and “checkmate” from "shah mat," or “the king is helpless.”
Back
Next
Related words
World
Computer
Player
Champion
Playing
Players
Human
Which
Games
About
Power
Would
People
Movie
Today
There
Where
Played
Computers
Board