József Pintér
József Pintér (born 9 November 1953 in Budapest) is a Hungarian chess Grandmaster and chess writer. He won the Hungarian Chess Championship in 1978 and 1979. Pinter gained his grandmaster title in 1982. He is well known for a 1984 brilliancy against his compatriot Lajos Portisch in that year's Hungarian Championship.
József Pintér | |
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Full name | József Pintér |
Country | ![]() |
Born | Budapest, Hungary | November 9, 1953
Title | Grandmaster |
FIDE rating | 2528 (August 2020) |
Peak rating | 2595 |
Books
- 1000 Minor Piece Endings (Caissa Hungary, 2007)
- 1000 Rook Endings (Magyar Sakkvilág, 2007)
- 1000 Pawn Endings (Magyar Sakkvilág, 2006)
- 300 fejtörő (300 Puzzles) (Magyar Sakkvilág, 2006)
- A sakktaktika titkai I, II, III, IV, (Secrets of chess tactics) - with István Pongó, (Magyar Sakkpartner Kiadó, 2002)
gollark: They don't even have *memory* - you just train the model a bunch, keep that around, feed it data, and then get the results; next time you want data out, you use the original model from the training phase.
gollark: They don't really have goals, only the training code does, and that goal is something like "maximize prediction accuracy with respect to the data".
gollark: They're big networks which are trained to detect patterns, sometimes very deep ones, in large amounts of data.
gollark: Current AI stuff doesn't have "minds" comparable to that of humans.
gollark: They don't really "think", or at least they don't really do goal-oriented behavior.
References
- Andrew Soltis, The 100 Best Chess Games of the 20th Century, Ranked. McFarlard & Company, Jefferson, NC, 2000
External links
- Jozsef Pinter player profile and games at Chessgames.com
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