A team of computing scientists is once again capturing the world's collective fascination with artificial intelligence. In a historic result for the flourishing AI research community, the team has ...
A computer program that taught itself to play poker has created nearly the best possible strategy for one version of the game, showing the value of techniques that may prove useful to help ...
In an ongoing effort to keep their players satisfied, Cake Poker has recently announced an expansion of their current Gold Chips and Gold Cards rewards program. Now, players will be given Gold Chips ...
Artificial intelligence reached a milestone recently. Scientists at Carnegie Mellon developed a program called Pluribus that can beat humans at six-player Texas hold ’em poker. Poker is a game of ...
is a senior reporter who has covered AI, robotics, and more for eight years at The Verge. AI has definitively beaten humans at another of our favorite games. A poker bot, designed by researchers from ...
Computers have figured out how to win at chess, checkers and tic-tac-toe, and now, a computer program has conquered the game of poker. A research team led by Michael Bowling, a professor of computer ...
A poker-playing software program developed by researchers at the University of Alberta is competing against some of the world’s best poker players in a man-machine showdown in Las Vegas that started ...
It’ll be “all in” next week as an advanced poker-playing computer program takes on two poker champions in a Texas-hold-em shootout for the ages. Well, OK maybe not for the ages but for $50,000 ...
BOT or NOT? This special series explores the evolving relationship between humans and machines, examining the ways that robots, artificial intelligence and automation are impacting our work and lives.
Over the last few years, poker vlogs have surged in popularity. As a result, the World Series of Poker released a new program incentivizing vloggers to promote the brand. WSOP officials cracked down ...
During a 2017 casino tournament, a poker-playing program called Libratus deftly defeated four professional players in 120,000 hands of two-player poker. But the program’s co-creator, Tuomas Sandholm, ...