DeepMind's go AI, called AlphaGo, has beaten the European champion with a score of 5-0. A match against top ranked human, Lee Se-dol, is scheduled for March.
Games are a great testing ground for developing smarter, more flexible algorithms that have the ability to tackle problems in ways similar to humans. Creating programs that are able to play games better than the best humans has a long history
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But one game has thwarted A.I. research thus far: the ancient game of Go.
I know several research groups where the PI's sole role is fundraising, despite them having much more funding than the average research group.
My point was more generic--it's not obvious to me why you would expect groups to think "okay, we have enough resources, let's stop trying to acquire more" instead of "okay, we have enough resources to take our ambitions to the next stage." The American Cancer Society has about a billion dollar budget, and yet they aren't saying "yeah, this is enough to deal with cancer, we don't need your money."
(It may be the case that a particular professor stops writing grant applications, because they're limited by attention they can give to their graduate students. But it's not like any of those professors will say "yeah, my field is big enough, we don't need any more professor slots for my students to take.")