A question for people asking for machine learning tutors: have you tried just reading through OpenAI blog posts and running the code examples they embed or link? Or going through the TensorFlow tutorials?
By using the word “just”, it gives me the impression that you think it’s easy to not get lost. In my experience with other fields, it is easy to get lost, and I would assume that the same is true with machine learning.
I meant it as “This seems like a clear starting point.” You’re correct that I think it’s easy to not get lost with those two starting points.
I’m my experience with other fields, it’s easy to get frustrated and give up. Getting lost is quite a bit more rare. You’ll have to click through a hundred dense links to understand your first paper in machine learning, as with any other field. If you can trudge through that, you’ll be fine. If you can’t, you’ll at least know what to ask.
Also, are you not curious about how much initiative people have regarding the topics they want to learn?
A question for people asking for machine learning tutors: have you tried just reading through OpenAI blog posts and running the code examples they embed or link? Or going through the TensorFlow tutorials?
By using the word “just”, it gives me the impression that you think it’s easy to not get lost. In my experience with other fields, it is easy to get lost, and I would assume that the same is true with machine learning.
I meant it as “This seems like a clear starting point.” You’re correct that I think it’s easy to not get lost with those two starting points.
I’m my experience with other fields, it’s easy to get frustrated and give up. Getting lost is quite a bit more rare. You’ll have to click through a hundred dense links to understand your first paper in machine learning, as with any other field. If you can trudge through that, you’ll be fine. If you can’t, you’ll at least know what to ask.
Also, are you not curious about how much initiative people have regarding the topics they want to learn?