this doesn't actually speed up the neural networks that much; it's a
technique to more quickly brute-force the search space of possible neural
networks for ones that execute faster while maintaining similar accuracy.
Typical hype article.
Anyway, the effort spent looking for bizarre architectures
https://www.extremetech.com/computing/288152-mit-develops-algorithm-to-accelerate-neural-networks-by-200x
i wonder how much this would speed up go programs?
thanks
--
Honesty is a very expensive gift. So, don't expect it from cheap people -
Warren Buffett
http://tayek.com/
__
Thanks for sharing the link. Taking a brief look at this paper, I'm quite
confused about their methodology and their interpretation of their data.
For example in figure 2 (b), if I understand correctly, they plot Elo
ratings for three independent runs where they run the entire AlphaZero
process fo
Hi,
I have just found out that the list is not sending emails to my free.fr
email address any more. So I subscribed with my gmail address, which I hope
should work better.
I had missed that very interesting message by David Wu (
http://computer-go.org/pipermail/computer-go/2019-March/010991.html)
Hi,
Here is a paper you might be interested in:
Abstract:
Since AlphaGo and AlphaGo Zero have achieved breakground successes in the game
of Go, the programs have been generalized to solve other tasks. Subsequently,
AlphaZero was developed to play Go, Chess and Shogi. In the literature, the
al