i dont mean to be off topic but does someone know of a tool to get back into an instagram account?? I was stupid forgot the login password. I love any tips you can offer me!
OMG hearing his voice again is like going back to those days when I was watching his tutorials in order to start with ML. Andrew helped a lot of people and most of the time, when I write something related to ML, I refer to him as the reason of why I am able to explain some of my knowledge. An absolute legend. BTW he is totally right about taking notes in a paper in order to retain information. That’s what is helping me more in understanding the logic behind algorithms and coding challenges asked by big tech companies, because I have to admit that I am very bad at those 😆
met him today in Portland Oregon. I've been taking his courses for the last 8 months. I've been already following his career. He is just as humble and cool in real life. He's the GOAT
Andrew ng is the person who made me fall in love with the subject. Me from a biology background started his coursera just for a small project with no background in maths and code. The way he presented the mathematical basis was so motivating that I was building concepts from the framework he built now I am more interested in learning the math behind it.
I'm one of those guys who have benefitted from the Financial Aid option of Coursera and Deep Learning Specialization... And I'm very indebted to Andrew Ng for that.. Hope I'll teach more unknown people about it and give back as much as I can
Bro how was that certificate useful, excluding the knowledge you gained... Do companies here in India value those certificates from Coursera, edx... etc?
Hi Siddharth, I have a few comments that may or not be useful to you and others. In case you are ever worried about financial aid in those Coursera courses know this : completion of the course (officially) whereby you receive a certification for completion is absolutely meaningless when finding work. I have interviewed dozens of students for AI related work, and in my opinion, the industry is flooded with these certifications from all sorts of online courses. On coursera you have the option to audit the course for free, which gives you access to all the material just not the certificate. I have seen so many students with certificates that have no real world experience, but the best students are always those that took what they learn and applied it to a small project of their own - however small. Never feel like the financial obligation should hold you back, and always know its not the certificate, its what you can do with the knowledge that matters. Hope that helps.
@@kenbobcorn You are absolutely right about the certificate part.. The assignments are actually very dumbed down imo.. Whenever I worked on a project or internship.. The most difficult part was creating the dataset in a format which can be fed into the model.. And that part is already done in all the assignments
Can you Imagine a boy from very rural India where no electricity. No concret road. He is very much interested on AI now listning your every Interview very mindfully.
@@dec13666 may be he is deprived of continuous power supply. Because it is major problem in rural area. Some villages get about 8 to 12 hours power supply in a day.
This is my second all-nighter in a row binge watching Lex Fridman Podcast videos, and I can say that I need another brain to help me comprehend all the insights I have gained.
When the interviewee and the interviewer master the subject... Great job Lex and always exciting to come across any content/material from you. Thank you gents
Prof. Andrew Ng has helped millions of students around the world by making his tutorials available to everyone on internet. Thank you! PS: He is so right about getting stuck at a "reputed" company/university and where you don't enjoy what you're doing.
[17:10] «Recoding knowledge in your own words promotes long-term retention. Comparing handwritten notes and typing, you can usually type faster than you can handwrite notes, so when people type, they are more likely to just transcribe verbatim what they've heard and that reduces the amount of recoding.»
I feel like that's because typing, especially if you're a really fast typer, is more of an unconscious action. Whereas writing is a more deliberate action.
I see so much well-deserved love and respect for Andrew Ng in these comments, but props to Lex also for asking all the right questions. Amazing interview!
the moment was when in the 5th week while showing the potential of neural network there comes a slide showing a man trying to gain vision using a camera and transmitting the electrical signal through his tongue. My friend that was the moment I knew that's it. that's what I will be working on.
Thanks Lex for all the great videos. I'm not really a computer science guy and am wondering if you'll ever have more videos on applied mathematics. I especially liked the video with Professor Strang. I used his textbook in my Linear Algebra course many years ago. Thanks and all the best.
I utterly agree on what Lex mentioned, considering the Reinforcement Learning and how it hasn't been fully explored, hence there are no notable applications using it. The biggest application i can think of, in terms of utilizing Reinforcement Learning, is OpenAI's Five. I am highly looking forward seeing more real world applications.
@@rezajanjani7712 I'm glad you asked! Here's everything I found extremely useful: 1) Make learning( or studying, I prefer learning since studying is something I attribute to school whereas learning is for personal development) a habit. 2) Sustained effort over a period of time is way better than a burst of effort, in the long run 3)While taking a course online, take notes to retain the information. 4) With regards to a career in Machine Learning : a) Get your foundation strong i.e be thorough with the basics and only then start working on the big things b) find a passion project, no matter how simple to apply what you learnt c)Dont go to a place( either to work or study) just because of the name on the building but instead see if the people and the culture align with your principles.
Andrew Ng seems great educator tackled even way of learning by make it a habit from few technics like writing notes. It is true to me, writing notes those difficult parts from learning will help to hard embed those informations in your head for easy recall. What he said is something quantum mechanics which where you put your attention is where your energy is.
I took Andrew's course on ML using Matlab 2 years ago, I hoped for something from him related to Python, and he made full specialization for it. Definitely taking the course as soon as I get some free time.
Thanks, Lex for the great effort you're putting on this program. I have to say that I expected the interview with Andrew Ng to be more interesting, you're interviewing one of the most interesting people and the leaders of the AI domain, yet you spent the whole interview asking educational questions about the courses and the learning prosses and pre-requisites instead of asking the meaningful, important questions you usually ask other guests! I hope you take this as positive feedback than criticism.
Yes, take a note in the paper when attending the course in Online, They Can Very Well to Increased your Memory Because When you Take a not in Paper Your Mind Focus on the particular point who you write on paper and never you forget who write on paper, it my Personal Point to Share, I am a Btech Student of Machine Learning Engineer.
If you're just getting started in the field, it's also worth considering exploring AI outside of deep learning! These days, machine learning is hyper-competitive, results change fast, and it can be hard to catch up to the "state-of-the-art", especially if you don't have a job at a company with massive troves of data. Right now we're in an age where deep learning is king, and many are predicting it will be the only form of artificial intelligence in the future. If you study the history of AI you realize hype comes and goes, but the technologies underneath survive and evolve over time. Symbolic methods, often referred to as "Good Old-Fashioned AI" or GOFAI never died, it has evolved into a rich intersection of neuro-symbolic reasoning, search algorithms, task and motion planning, robotics, etc. These approaches are not entirely separate from deep learning, and generative modeling is an emerging unifying paradigm for both symbolic and neural approaches. Many will be coming from the neural-network side and trying to figure out symbolic methods. In that space, it will be extremely hard to get a competitive edge. Correspondingly, there is an extremely well-placed niche for people working on symbolic methods (especially those who are well-versed in probability) to make a huge impact on neural networks. If you've read this far, I'd especially recommend looking at probabilistic programming (disclosure, that's what I work on) to expand your perspective of what sorts of AI are possible.
"What matters most is not the logo above the door when you walk into the giant building every day what matters the most is who are the 10 people the 30 people you interact with every day." - Andrew Ng
He says dater sometimes, in ML course I thought it was the recording device but he does say it. Safe to say ; from AndrewNG import data as dater from AndrewNG import StanfordOnline as so for data in so : if (too much dater) collect(dater) = False else: collect(dater) = True
Sorry in advance for asking such a basic question. Can you suggest me places where I can find good research papers on AI / ML or Deep Learning? Thank you.
the aura of andrew ng is so peaceful. really inspiring podcast.
He is Singaporean... its kind of representative.
i dont mean to be off topic but does someone know of a tool to get back into an instagram account??
I was stupid forgot the login password. I love any tips you can offer me!
His voice is smooth like satin. This is the first time I am hearing to his voice…😅
Andrews ng is the one of the greatest teacher in this era !!!
OMG hearing his voice again is like going back to those days when I was watching his tutorials in order to start with ML. Andrew helped a lot of people and most of the time, when I write something related to ML, I refer to him as the reason of why I am able to explain some of my knowledge. An absolute legend.
BTW he is totally right about taking notes in a paper in order to retain information. That’s what is helping me more in understanding the logic behind algorithms and coding challenges asked by big tech companies, because I have to admit that I am very bad at those 😆
I'll start taking hand written notes right now! I literally SUCK at algorithms and data structures
At what minute of this video he talks about taking notes? Thank you kindly.
are u using linkedin i'd like to connect
@@raznatovicanastasija 16:19
met him today in Portland Oregon.
I've been taking his courses for the last 8 months. I've been already following his career. He is just as humble and cool in real life. He's the GOAT
Feels so good to see Lex surprised and happy in a sense after Andrew asked him something
Andrew ng is the person who made me fall in love with the subject. Me from a biology background started his coursera just for a small project with no background in maths and code. The way he presented the mathematical basis was so motivating that I was building concepts from the framework he built now I am more interested in learning the math behind it.
I've no words to express my gratitude for such humble intelligent generous person. Thanks prof Andrew Ng.
Andrew Ng is a perfect teacher. The way he teaches is great.
I'm one of those guys who have benefitted from the Financial Aid option of Coursera and Deep Learning Specialization... And I'm very indebted to Andrew Ng for that.. Hope I'll teach more unknown people about it and give back as much as I can
yes to that mindset !
Bro how was that certificate useful, excluding the knowledge you gained... Do companies here in India value those certificates from Coursera, edx... etc?
@@Abhi-ct1gp no they don't value any certificates/specializations. But they do value your knowledge from these certificates and projects
Hi Siddharth, I have a few comments that may or not be useful to you and others. In case you are ever worried about financial aid in those Coursera courses know this : completion of the course (officially) whereby you receive a certification for completion is absolutely meaningless when finding work. I have interviewed dozens of students for AI related work, and in my opinion, the industry is flooded with these certifications from all sorts of online courses. On coursera you have the option to audit the course for free, which gives you access to all the material just not the certificate. I have seen so many students with certificates that have no real world experience, but the best students are always those that took what they learn and applied it to a small project of their own - however small. Never feel like the financial obligation should hold you back, and always know its not the certificate, its what you can do with the knowledge that matters. Hope that helps.
@@kenbobcorn You are absolutely right about the certificate part.. The assignments are actually very dumbed down imo.. Whenever I worked on a project or internship.. The most difficult part was creating the dataset in a format which can be fed into the model.. And that part is already done in all the assignments
Can you Imagine a boy from very rural India where no electricity. No concret road. He is very much interested on AI now listning your every Interview very mindfully.
same here
👍
Me too
If he doesn't have electricity, how is he supposed to charge the device needed to watch this?
Just saying 🤔
@@dec13666 may be he is deprived of continuous power supply. Because it is major problem in rural area. Some villages get about 8 to 12 hours power supply in a day.
This is my second all-nighter in a row binge watching Lex Fridman Podcast videos, and I can say that I need another brain to help me comprehend all the insights I have gained.
Andrew Ng and Lex Fridman. Two of main favourite AI minds! Legends!
Josh Starmer
His course on ML is one of the best classes I ever took. Highly recommend.
This guy Andrew has a sense of calmness and he is so humble. I did his beginner level AI 4 Everyone course and he is such a nice guy to hear to.
When the interviewee and the interviewer master the subject... Great job Lex and always exciting to come across any content/material from you. Thank you gents
Lex Fridman, this channel is a gold mine. Thank you.
fr
Andrew really cares a great human waheguru bless him love the man
Wow, this gentleman is incredible. I love that he takes human learning as seriously as ML.
Prof. Andrew Ng has helped millions of students around the world by making his tutorials available to everyone on internet. Thank you!
PS: He is so right about getting stuck at a "reputed" company/university and where you don't enjoy what you're doing.
Andrew Ng is inspiring, peaceful, and incredibly polite.
Andrew Ng's course on Machine Learning is AMAZING. I took it 8 years ago, and took it again ~3 years ago.
[17:10] «Recoding knowledge in your own words promotes long-term retention. Comparing handwritten notes and typing, you can usually type faster than you can handwrite notes, so when people type, they are more likely to just transcribe verbatim what they've heard and that reduces the amount of recoding.»
I feel like that's because typing, especially if you're a really fast typer, is more of an unconscious action. Whereas writing is a more deliberate action.
I have learnt more in these 26 minutes than I learnt in my whole previous semester.
that's true
Thanks for arranging this. Much appreciation 💝
Andrew is a genuinely good guy and an excellent teacher.
i love andrew even hearing his voice takes me back to his tutorials.
Stephen is an amazing teacher. "Every word needs to fight for it's life".
Hey this dude came on the Podcast to remind to continue the Coursera AI Course by Standford haha
I see so much well-deserved love and respect for Andrew Ng in these comments, but props to Lex also for asking all the right questions. Amazing interview!
I always fascinated by this man's humility
Andrew Ng course made me fall in love with AI especially his machine learning course
the moment was when in the 5th week while showing the potential of neural network there comes a slide showing a man trying to gain vision using a camera and transmitting the electrical signal through his tongue. My friend that was the moment I knew that's it. that's what I will be working on.
this is so great still so relevant after 4 years of. this video being released
yeeeeeah big thank you to this man. i love this man he helped tones of people on there project with his videos
Thanks for listening to your audience and creating these clips. Direct, informative - perfect.
Thank You dude! Keep rocking
lmao though 26 mins is still way to long, but I suppose for the content it's right.
BTW who switches the camera? Is it AI or a clone Jamie?
Thanks for sharing such interviews!! (:
Just signed up for the course. Excited to get started, thanks for sharing your knowledge!
Which programming language is this course based on ?
@@elpolodiablo5486 python
Andrew Ng is the god of this subject.Period.
Thanks Andrew Ng and Lex. Both of you are doing great work.
Amazing talk especially the latter half 👌👌 Thank you Andrew and Lex.
Thanks Lex for all the great videos. I'm not really a computer science guy and am wondering if you'll ever have more videos on applied mathematics. I especially liked the video with Professor Strang. I used his textbook in my Linear Algebra course many years ago. Thanks and all the best.
man, this interview is pure gold, thanks for sharing
Thanks Lex and Andrew for sharing this conversation. Great insights !!
I utterly agree on what Lex mentioned, considering the Reinforcement Learning and how it hasn't been fully explored, hence there are no notable applications using it. The biggest application i can think of, in terms of utilizing Reinforcement Learning, is OpenAI's Five. I am highly looking forward seeing more real world applications.
And two years later. ChatGPT.
Wow! This is the best advice I've ever heard! Thanks Andrew Ng and Lex!
Chrys R what was that?
@@rezajanjani7712 I'm glad you asked!
Here's everything I found extremely useful:
1) Make learning( or studying, I prefer learning since studying is something I attribute to school whereas learning is for personal development) a habit.
2) Sustained effort over a period of time is way better than a burst of effort, in the long run
3)While taking a course online, take notes to retain the information.
4) With regards to a career in Machine Learning :
a) Get your foundation strong i.e be thorough with the basics and only then start working on the big things
b) find a passion project, no matter how simple to apply what you learnt
c)Dont go to a place( either to work or study) just because of the name on the building but instead see if the people and the culture align with your principles.
Sir, You don't ever need to doubt yourself on whether your course/specialization is the best or not. they absolutely are the best.
When Andrew Ng started talking, I went into the AI learning mode straight away.
Thank you! Alex, you are doing amazing work. Taking the course ASAP.
who is Alex though..?
Andrew Ng seems great educator tackled even way of learning by make it a habit from few technics like writing notes. It is true to me, writing notes those difficult parts from learning will help to hard embed those informations in your head for easy recall. What he said is something quantum mechanics which where you put your attention is where your energy is.
I took Andrew's course on ML using Matlab 2 years ago, I hoped for something from him related to Python, and he made full specialization for it. Definitely taking the course as soon as I get some free time.
Nice to hear your voice Andrew from high quality microphone finally 😁
I am taking this specialization on Coursera, this interview was so helpful.
That watch. I love that he shows it off :)
Your channel is a goldmine.
Keep it up
Excellent interview thank you!
Reinforcment learning is a part that really inspired me,
The Utopia of ml the future of ml
I loved that you mentioned knowledge graphs. I've been looking into them and I find them neat.
Thank you for this video much appreciated bro
Regarding handwritten notes: I've found that it is even better if you illustrate the concepts you are learning.
The greatest minds on 🌎 We Love you ❤️
If one day we make AI robots, lets make them to be like Andrew Ng - what a great personality.!! Love from Kwazulu Natal in South Africa.
Thank you, Lex.
Andrew Ng lectures help me so much with my Dissertation.
Lex: *asks question*
Andrew Ng: *replies with same question*
Lex: "I think that's a really good question"
Thanks, Lex for the great effort you're putting on this program. I have to say that I expected the interview with Andrew Ng to be more interesting, you're interviewing one of the most interesting people and the leaders of the AI domain, yet you spent the whole interview asking educational questions about the courses and the learning prosses and pre-requisites instead of asking the meaningful, important questions you usually ask other guests! I hope you take this as positive feedback than criticism.
Andrew ng is the best teacher
Yes, take a note in the paper when attending the course in Online, They Can Very Well to Increased your Memory Because When you Take a not in Paper Your Mind Focus on the particular point who you write on paper and never you forget who write on paper, it my Personal Point to Share, I am a Btech Student of Machine Learning Engineer.
If you're just getting started in the field, it's also worth considering exploring AI outside of deep learning! These days, machine learning is hyper-competitive, results change fast, and it can be hard to catch up to the "state-of-the-art", especially if you don't have a job at a company with massive troves of data.
Right now we're in an age where deep learning is king, and many are predicting it will be the only form of artificial intelligence in the future. If you study the history of AI you realize hype comes and goes, but the technologies underneath survive and evolve over time. Symbolic methods, often referred to as "Good Old-Fashioned AI" or GOFAI never died, it has evolved into a rich intersection of neuro-symbolic reasoning, search algorithms, task and motion planning, robotics, etc.
These approaches are not entirely separate from deep learning, and generative modeling is an emerging unifying paradigm for both symbolic and neural approaches. Many will be coming from the neural-network side and trying to figure out symbolic methods. In that space, it will be extremely hard to get a competitive edge. Correspondingly, there is an extremely well-placed niche for people working on symbolic methods (especially those who are well-versed in probability) to make a huge impact on neural networks. If you've read this far, I'd especially recommend looking at probabilistic programming (disclosure, that's what I work on) to expand your perspective of what sorts of AI are possible.
Great. Thank you for doing this.
I agree to the RL part completely!!
I have a job in Deep Learning thanks to Andrew Ng
Andrew gives brilliant advice
Отличное интервью
"What matters most is not the logo above the door when you walk into the giant building every day what matters the most is who are the 10 people the 30 people you interact with every day." - Andrew Ng
Very good video, thank you so much!
Awesome interview love it.!
andrew ng is so zen
@Lex, Your videos are inspiring. Your thought process about the world and philosophical mind is mind blowing 😍 !
thank u for the great talk !
This felt like a police custody interview in a room where Andrew Ng was the criminal and this guy was the chief incharge of him
Great session
Andrew Ng i am indebted to you.
Hand written notes definitely increases retention.
Andrew Ng is so cool. ♥
He says dater sometimes, in ML course I thought it was the recording device but he does say it. Safe to say ;
from AndrewNG import data as dater
from AndrewNG import StanfordOnline as so
for data in so :
if (too much dater)
collect(dater) = False
else:
collect(dater) = True
I could listen to that guy all day! Would have loved to hear KAGGLE once!
Thank you !
Man this guy should start an asmr channel
Thanks to Lex and Andrew for such a valuable interview!
4:05 more data only means less flexibility and getting worse at really different scenarios, so that makes sense
I see Andrew I click
Such a great inspirational video, Andrew Ng is so cool...
This guys machine learning course was the way I started also.
I couldnt go through the whole video sorry but its because of tge interviewer. He had so much if energy, i couldn't keep up
finished watching
Teaching is an art. Gratitude to Andrew neg
Sorry in advance for asking such a basic question.
Can you suggest me places where I can find good research papers on AI / ML or Deep Learning? Thank you.
machine learning and deep learning and quantum mechanic for all virtual digital quantum
Andrew is best
How about optimizing traffic lighting with reinforcement learning? Seems like a good enough application for real world to me
I have thought about that too, let's hope it will happen
I love it