AI BOARD
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I am releasing a biography of Demis Hassabis, the father of Google's artificial intelligence.
Author
김 경진
Date
2026-04-03 16:41
Views
22
https://drive.google.com/file/d/13G6ayxmcMjiBv_suzuh8jatg6Yp1a39R/view?usp=sharing
Demis Hassabis, winner of the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
He created AlphaGo, solved the secrets of protein structure, and now, as CEO of Google DeepMind, leads Gemini and NotebookLM. A substantial part of the AI we use every day comes through this person's hands.
This book follows not his algorithms, but his life. A boy born into a modest immigrant family in North London, traveling to chess tournaments in his father's old camper van. From the days when prize money had to cover the fuel, to making a million-selling game at 17 and founding DeepMind at 34. It is the record of a person who held onto one question, "What is intelligence?", for 40 years.
I recommend this book to our children and young people who will live through the AI age. Hassabis is a person who made his own path not through the environment he was born into, but through the ability to learn how to learn. He used pattern recognition learned from chess in game design, simulations learned from games in neuroscience, and insights gained from neuroscience in AI. This book contains something that lasts longer than coding technique. If you go deeply into any field, you can move into another. A person who holds a question and endures eventually reaches an answer. That is the evidence Demis Hassabis shows the next generation.
I recommend that children studying now and young people who will live with artificial intelligence for their whole lives read it.
Kim Kyung-jin
Demis Hassabis, winner of the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
He created AlphaGo, solved the secrets of protein structure, and now, as CEO of Google DeepMind, leads Gemini and NotebookLM. A substantial part of the AI we use every day comes through this person's hands.
This book follows not his algorithms, but his life. A boy born into a modest immigrant family in North London, traveling to chess tournaments in his father's old camper van. From the days when prize money had to cover the fuel, to making a million-selling game at 17 and founding DeepMind at 34. It is the record of a person who held onto one question, "What is intelligence?", for 40 years.
I recommend this book to our children and young people who will live through the AI age. Hassabis is a person who made his own path not through the environment he was born into, but through the ability to learn how to learn. He used pattern recognition learned from chess in game design, simulations learned from games in neuroscience, and insights gained from neuroscience in AI. This book contains something that lasts longer than coding technique. If you go deeply into any field, you can move into another. A person who holds a question and endures eventually reaches an answer. That is the evidence Demis Hassabis shows the next generation.
I recommend that children studying now and young people who will live with artificial intelligence for their whole lives read it.
Kim Kyung-jin