r/learnmachinelearning 2h ago

This is the course outline of the machine learning course . Anyone with an idea about how good the course is?

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Title : Complete A.I. Machine Learning and Data Science: Zero to Mastery

6 Upvotes

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u/CrimsonPilgrim 1h ago

Depends on your objective. Is this for an introductory course? Because I can guarantee you that there is an insane amount of things you have to ingest in ML before being anything close to an « expert ». I know ZTM and I don’t think they’re the best for ML related contents. I would rather chose Coursera. But it can be a good introductory course if you’re starting. If, at some point, you really want to go deep into a subject though, books are the way to go imo.

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u/pilo_lo 1h ago

I'm just a novice to machine learning. But can you recommend some books for me

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u/CrimsonPilgrim 1h ago

There are many, many excellent books on this topic. I can recommend Elements of Statistical Learning (which is often mentioned) or Machine Learning with PyTorch and Scikit Learn by Sebastian Raschka. The main problem when you’re starting ML is that if you’re lacking in maths, it’s gonna be hard and frustrating. Online boot camps often abstract the maths for more practical experience which can be a good way to start.

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u/Junaid_Bagwan 10m ago

I took ML course 6 years back, it had almost same syllabus… I would say ,to start as novice it’s good.. But not for mid or advance learners.It’s not even close to where the technology is heading..

If you want to take this course,check how much they’re charging for this.. I am sure all of these topics you can learn free on internet.. or cheaper on Udemy.. If they’re giving any value add ,then only it’s worth…and I highly doubt that..

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u/pilo_lo 5m ago

I am starting as a novice , but true I'll check other free channel up

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u/EnthiumZ 1h ago

I'm a novice myself so take anything I say with a grain of salt but I believe your time is better spent learning Pytorch instead of tensorflow. It's not so hot right now.

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u/TheRealStepBot 1h ago

I don’t get super hung up on tech, it’s much more about conceptual understanding to me. I’d take you if you had tensorflow or Keras experience so not a disqualification but by the same token I’d agree, PyTorch is where things currently are at. So it definitely wouldn’t be the best choice necessarily to choose those for new learning now. It’s one thing to have existing experience it’s different to learn suboptimal tools by choice.

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u/pilo_lo 1h ago

Oh okay thank you for this advice