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Haris Hussain
United States
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 22 พ.ย. 2013
~ filming for fun • career, editing, tech, and my life in my 20s ~
Hey, I'm Haris! I make videos because I enjoy the creative and editing process, and sharing/documenting various interests and thoughts in my life. I also work as a Machine Learning Engineer at a "big tech" company in SF. Previously, I was in ATL wrapping up my Masters in ML from Georgia Tech where I originally graduated with a Bachelors in CS.
insta: haris.films
tiktok: www.tiktok.com/@haris.films
all my opinions and views are my own and don't reflect my employers
Hey, I'm Haris! I make videos because I enjoy the creative and editing process, and sharing/documenting various interests and thoughts in my life. I also work as a Machine Learning Engineer at a "big tech" company in SF. Previously, I was in ATL wrapping up my Masters in ML from Georgia Tech where I originally graduated with a Bachelors in CS.
insta: haris.films
tiktok: www.tiktok.com/@haris.films
all my opinions and views are my own and don't reflect my employers
How to Get Machine Learning Interviews in 2025
My advice and tips on getting a Machine Learning Engineer role INTERVIEW for computer science students and early career engineers! There’s more resources from other channels on passing such interviews, but I see a lot of friends wondering why their resume doesn’t get past the screening for the ML specific roles and that’s why I made this video.
Also to clarify, I'm not saying to NOT get a PhD - everyone's experiences are different and there's multiple paths and definitely not a one size fits all for so many ML teams hiring in the industry...just stating how I would go about building my resume when applying to get those ML engineering interviews
im at the beach for fun- this video was made on a whim in case it could help someone before i move onto other content !
Also to clarify, I'm not saying to NOT get a PhD - everyone's experiences are different and there's multiple paths and definitely not a one size fits all for so many ML teams hiring in the industry...just stating how I would go about building my resume when applying to get those ML engineering interviews
im at the beach for fun- this video was made on a whim in case it could help someone before i move onto other content !
มุมมอง: 2 146
วีดีโอ
My Honest Advice for Computer Science Majors
มุมมอง 76K21 วันที่ผ่านมา
One Mistake Not to Make as a Computer Science Student in 2024 - I wanted to experiment with a different video format - extremely rushed but hope this helps someone!
Software Engineers Touch Grass Cinematically
มุมมอง 4279 หลายเดือนก่อน
My friend and I go outside and try vlogging/casual filmmaking just for fun - did a casual vlog but wasn't sure on scrapping or uploading this, happy with how it came out tho/kept it for the cinematics in the beginning :P - next video is gonna 10x this: "The Magic of Learning"
Uploading again
มุมมอง 28211 หลายเดือนก่อน
This video isn't supposed to be coherent or edited at alll; more so posting this here for me to forcefully break my streak of not uploading lol! let me know what yalls new years goals are and what yall are looking forward to see - i got some fire content coming soon for yall inshaAllah!
Day in the Life of a Computer Science Student | Georgia Tech
มุมมอง 28K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Here's a single day in my life at Georgia Tech as a computer science major! If you're new to my channel, hi! I'm Haris and am a fourth year at Georgia Tech studying CS. Love creating lifestyle, CS, dance, and cinematic videos! Thanks a ton for watching and please drop a sub if you enjoy! :) Featured Channels! Sajjaad Khader - th-cam.com/users/SajjaadKhader Abdur-Rahman Abdulmalik - th-cam.com/c...
yosemite.exe
มุมมอง 3043 ปีที่แล้ว
summer trip to yosemite california with college friends , this upload marks the beginning of a new era
guy teaches himself to dance | 2 year dance transformation (freestyle)
มุมมอง 5183 ปีที่แล้ว
Just reached two years in dance, thought I would upload my progression so far. Wouldn’t call this a complete dance transformation since I still got a ways to go in learning more styles. But you do see me progress from complete beginner to confident in my freestyle dancing! If you took anything away from this or just enjoyed some of the clownery/cringe I'd appreciate the like and sub :) Timestam...
why it's not too late to start that skill
มุมมอง 3363 ปีที่แล้ว
thought I'd make a video on my perspective when starting new things, hopefully you took something away from this :P If you're new to my channel, I'm Haris and am a third year at Georgia Tech studying CS and I like making videos. Time Management Links: How I Manage my Time as a Doctor TH-camr - 9 Time Management Tips th-cam.com/video/5Nin1OtjOlU/w-d-xo.html One Way to Effectively Manage Your Tim...
An Ordinary Day in My Life | Georgia Tech
มุมมอง 1.1K3 ปีที่แล้ว
A typical day in my life at Georgia Tech (quarantine edition) If you're new to my channel, I'm Haris and am a third year at Georgia Tech studying CS. Love making video edits, CS content, productivity and dance vids. Thanks a ton for watching :) MUSIC Playboi Carti - Shoota (Audio) ft. Lil Uzi Vert Brasstracks, Masego, Common - Golden Ticket Avixn - Whenever (Lofi)
Dancing on My College Campus | I'm Back!
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Dancing on My College Campus | I'm Back!
How to motion track in Adobe After Effects CC with Element 3D By Paradox (No Boujou Or C4D)
มุมมอง 21K10 ปีที่แล้ว
How to motion track in Adobe After Effects CC with Element 3D By Paradox (No Boujou Or C4D)
Make cs great again
on sum anime shi
short, explained and straight to the point
Turn the music up a little more please. I can still hear you talking
My passion is music and arts but as i have failed that i am now moving on to the art of banging your head against the computer screen
Amazing advice. I'm going deep into ML and low level/robotics with a math minor. Wish me luck.
Hey haris, I am doing one ml project in my uni with one professor, is it important to dig deep into the mathematics of any algorithm or concept do they ask while interview? pls reply
Lots of advice online is probably not even qualified. A CS degree gives you the ability to have a wider view and after you graduate you’ll have to learn more programming to catch up, but the foundations are already there. If you work for big companies and if you work in the field of machine learning, hardware engineering or computer vision how does math doesn’t matter? Sometimes I believe some advice from the internet is just based or self taught programmers only refer to web development, where you probably can survive self taught
Agreed
Hey I'm trying to land a role for an ml robotics engineer. I have a background in data science though so I wasn't sure exactly how to go about it
GEORGIA TECH
west coast man now :DD
Thanks for the advice! I’ve been working on a Major Research Project at my university. My professor and I are currently coming up with new methods to create watermarks in the generated outputs by LLMs. I hope this will be considered as an academic project!
It's a start! Make sure to enjoy it, and definitely sounds like an academic project as there's a lot of interest in the AI Ethics / Safety and Responsibility space right now - don't be afraid to go deep into any math/papers and learn hard things!
(English is my 3rd language, so, sorry for a bad grammar) Honestly, i almost never hear people saying that i should avoid low level stuff and complicated concepts. More people talk down to me like i am below them and say "you are not a true programmer if you use python" or "True developers use linux as your OS and vim as their only code editor" or "js = soydev", never actually explaining why and just repeating these stupid dogmas, which feels extremely toxic. I never hated the low level concepts, c, linux or vim, just the people, who try forced upon me. Probably i would have started to appreciate c more if we had initially started with something more beginner-friendly, like python in my university, probably my hate for linux/vim users would not exist if they just shut up and let me decide which OS/editor to use for coding myself and probably, i would enjoy programming much more if it had less toxic community. Learning complicated concepts and coding in harder languages before switching to easy ones is frustrating, does not make much sense and just seems like a way to gatekeep beginner programmers. People, who tell all those awesome stories about how they became a god tier programmer from staring with c should stop thinking that learning style that worked for them will work for everyone and at least try to understand why people may not like it. Also, i don't understand all people who don't ask any questions and blindly agree with all these popular takes about learning low-level concepts and say it's actually useful when they don't even have a job. Just WHY?
Nice try universities, we all know universities don’t actually teach the hard stuff either, you find those out through books, research papers and doing hard projects
cybersecurity student and still very applicable
I thought i was watching a anime
This vid gave me diabetes but also an ML job so it was so worth
Third semester, thought of dropping out since I'm very behind. I'm going to practice some math problems and rework my foundations to have a more intuitive understanding of my current courseload. I might die trying, but I'll be back reporting how it went when it's time to graduate.
Do you have any advice for a mathematics student interested in the space?
If you’re interested in the space, try implementing some math from papers in a section of ML you’re interested (for example it could be a tiny Mamba model, or a new policy on top of reinforcement learning etc). Even better if you can find a research lab to do this with and get some qualified projects; and learn basic Python.
@ thank you for the response! I’ll definitely have a look into that. Would you recommend getting a masters in like compsci? I have very strong grades in all my modules thus far so this could be an option. I am not sure how well it would actually improve my career prospects however
@@philip7039 If you get a Masters, it might help marginally - but it's not the main differentiator/enough for some positions. Now if you do a thesis or some academic projects through your masters (outside of the courses, like with your professor or on your own related to the ML specialty), then that will make the masters meaningful and actually help. For example, if you just do a masters with some courses it might help you luck/land a role. But if you do a masters because you're interested in generating video with AI and what the state of the art for that looks like, and you implement some basic proof of concept papers or even play with some of the technology then you can apply to more prestigious places in the video ai space like RunwayML and will definitely have an easier time. So TLDR - if you know you want to specialize or learn deeper, then a masters is great as long as you take advantage of that time to also do some projects and not just rely on your courses. If you are just doing it hoping the title alone will carry you, then I would reconsider doing it later with more industry knowledge/experience etc.
There's so much I want to learn. I would take harder classes or even go for a graduate degree, but school is so difficult that I'm barely scraping by. I'm never able to explore topics in as much depth as I want and I don't have any other option but to take the lightest courseload I can get. If you're someone who is able to get more out of your university experience than you currently are, don't take that for granted.
Damn, i am not sure if the gif is simply popular, but i stumbled upon that gif about dijkstras algorithm litterally this morning in some git project
compilers was very frustrating in the beginning but it really helped me understand a lot and i feel i learned so much from it
Refer me pls
I'd like one too, if you're giving them out
TL;DR Learn as much as you can. Who knows what field you'll specialize in. My path from college to work made no use of what I learnt from the previous step. Obviously you have the standard courses, like OS, Compiler, Discrete Math, OOP, and so on. But then came the electives. My overall performance was lagging, so I got last pickings for the elective coruses This practically force me into taking ML electives. You'd think my undergraduate thesis will have an ML-related topic? No, it was computer-graphics-related instead. Then I landed a job at a FinTech company... I'm pretty sure I flunked the interview questions, since they were about DBs. But somehow, I got accepted. Now, I need to learn about banking concepts.
Can you give me a few ML project ideas
hi Sajjaad I am a follower of yours. I was wondering if you are trying to pivot into Machine learning engineer role?
So glad someone is talking about this!!! There's so many vacancies in specialized role while the SAAS market is saturated af. I wish more of my classmates took the classes I enjoy seriously rather than simply hating on it because it doesn't get them placed immediately.
CS Major - The Anime Opening. Man just told u how to pass your training arc.
can’t believe i just drank like 100 mango lassis
fire video brother
Thank you brother
not even a swe but respect to the Mr ML
first!
the potential man megumi's ost be playing
Studying CS was the worst decision ever. If you aren't into it way before going to university, it will NEVER be for you.
@@whydoIneedAchannel2024 I know people that decided it was for them during the first or second year university and now work at Meta or Google - “never” is never true
This video played on AutoPlay, WTF IS HAPPENING!?!?!?!?!?!?
is there anything more cringe than being a computer science major?
Your existence
my sigma juices r leaking
Alternative title: How to study for your life
Currently am I CS Major and honestly the math I’m learning has helped improve my programming immensely
*hesitantly raises hand "I-I think Calculus and other Math classes are useful..."
chill bro, the mfs in my class can't even do simple C programs without chat gpt
Thanks for the advice I'm just starting CS.
This video is amazing
Go yellow jackets
For new grads/juniors/college students, it's not about the knowledge you have. It's about presentation. Even if you specialize heavily into the theory behind a CS topic like ML, it won't matter if you can't get an interview. Companies won't waste time on you unless you catch their interest. That means becoming distinguishable from the crowd. In my opinion, taking a bunch of hard classes is not enough, especially if you aren't going to a top CS school. You have to go out of your way to make yourself noticeable. Solve interesting problems, and show off your solutions to companies and recruiters. Get your foot in the door, and everything becomes much easier.
Thank you Haris
Nice editing!
One frickin godamn question, how tf you skip classes (i'm in a private college) , like that's the most broken thing like, skip harder classes and redo at your own pace.But man idk , i don't want to study 5% of a harder topic when i could have build a projects on those gained skills and then learn theory if required(man life sucks hard).
i cant hear the music can you make it louder
@@ahmadalrabeei5764 yeah I will next time thanks
Some good points just want to point out correlation does not equal causation. People who take these harder classes are likely self motivated and thus have things outside of class they are doing to help them land these big name jobs/internships.
Don't let college stop you either. All of these subjects can be studied independently. And if you can add some advanced compiler or OS work into your portfolio, that can be just as demonstrative of your skill set to prospective employers. You gotta want it, and it helps to love it.