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| | Is Udacity's AI Nanodegree Worth It? | | 34 points by interdrift on Feb 15, 2017 | hide | past | favorite | 16 comments | | I want to get into professional ML/AI. I'm working as full time software engineer for 3 years now and I'm looking to pick up some high-end skills in AI/ML after going through the basics in Coursera, Edx. I'm looking for a review of the past term in the program since it is VERY costly for someone from eastern Europe so I want to make sure I'm not making a stupid move by paying for the AI nanodegree in which I have been offered a place. |
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I look for actual projects you have contributed to, published research, OSS contrib etc... that shows you can actually build something deployable and robust (mod your experience). Why? Most ML researchers are terrible at actually deploying products using ML.
School work can be relevant if it is part of a thesis, or research effort but in that case it's really still just [goto contributions].
At the application/implementation level you won't be making a new version of eg. gradient descent (and if you are you shouldn't be in industry as that's probably* a waste of resources), you'll be implementing existing ML systems and optimizing parameters. The most important thing you should be able to do is identify sources of data, structure data inputs flow and manage variability for the data you are using for both training and classification.
This doesn't answer your question directly, but it answers the implied question: What skills should I have to be a professional ML engineer?