This seems needlessly narrow minded. Just because AI is better than humans doesn’t make it uniformly better than humans in all subtasks of chess.
I don’t know enough about the specifics that this guy is talking about (I am not an expert) but I do know that until the release of NN-based algorithms most top players were still comfortable talking about positions where the computer was mis-evaluating positions soon out of the opening.
To take another more concrete example—computers were much better than humans in 2004, and yet Peter Leko still managed to refute a computer prepared line OTB in a world championship game.
This seems needlessly narrow minded. Just because AI is better than humans doesn’t make it uniformly better than humans in all subtasks of chess.
I don’t know enough about the specifics that this guy is talking about (I am not an expert) but I do know that until the release of NN-based algorithms most top players were still comfortable talking about positions where the computer was mis-evaluating positions soon out of the opening.
To take another more concrete example—computers were much better than humans in 2004, and yet Peter Leko still managed to refute a computer prepared line OTB in a world championship game.