+ 8

What are some best websites to learn and earn certification on Machine learning?

13th Oct 2019, 4:41 AM
Poulamee Pal
Poulamee Pal - avatar
6 Antworten
+ 1
https://deals.makeuseof.com/?rid=6446437 There are about 100 books for free from PacktHub including videos inside the stackskills platform. You can view for yourself by selecting instructor. It includes two courses from Colt Steele, a few courses by Rob Percival. The deal sells pretty much all the online courses but it is very nice to get 100 books for 60$ along with the videos as a bonus. https://www.reddit.com/r/deals/comments/dkvx6j/100_packthub_ebooks_300500hrs_of_video_courses/ The books include machine learning. You can then use books from Oreilly. Oreilly includes a ton of books. There is also subscription for Dummies Books Series through Scribd. There are quite a few subscription based librairies including Amazon which may not be the best. PacktHub gives free 20 books upon joining. MSDN has a lot of videos. Upon joining their developer program for free after making a Microsoft Account, you get two months of video course for DataCamp, 1 month of LinkedIn. Infosec Institute has all cybersec courses for free for october including all the CCNA courses for potentially *getting* a job. The best is to use minimal paid resources, library books or subscription to e-books, blogs. Kaggle has ton of resources for machine learning but so is OpenCV. You must at first understand the machine learn theory so it is good to take your hands on MOOCS like EDX, Udacity free courses, Khan Academy, Saylor Academy, Open Educational Resources, Free Books. There are also quite several channels, blogs and different subscription for book collections. Oreilly and Scribd has ton of books for subscription but there are also free books on Archive.org and such. Khan Academy, free books from archive org, free books kaggle, subscription, mit opencourseware free books machine learning, udacity, tensorflow, fastai... However, the most essential is maths and perceptron theory. Have strong statistical background, experience with DataBases (Treating Data), regex & languages and read proper math academia books, you are good.
21st Oct 2019, 6:33 AM
Denis Pavlov
Denis Pavlov - avatar
+ 6
Thank you very much for sharing! 😊
21st Oct 2019, 6:40 AM
Poulamee Pal
Poulamee Pal - avatar
+ 1
Check-out SkillShare https://www.skillshare.com/
13th Oct 2019, 5:21 AM
Usman Sabuwala
Usman Sabuwala - avatar
+ 1
https://deals.makeuseof.com/?rid=6446437 There are about 100 books for free from PacktHub including videos inside the stackskills platform. You can view for yourself by selecting instructor. It includes two courses from Colt Steele, a few courses by Rob Percival. The deal sells pretty much all the online courses but it is very nice to get 100 books for 60$ along with the videos as a bonus. https://www.reddit.com/r/deals/comments/dkvx6j/100_packthub_ebooks_300500hrs_of_video_courses/ The books include machine learning. You can then use books from Oreilly. Oreilly includes a ton of books. There is also subscription for Dummies Books Series through Scribd. There are quite a few subscription based librairies including Amazon which may not be the best. PacktHub gives free 20 books upon joining. MSDN has a lot of videos. Upon joining their developer program for free after making a Microsoft Account, you get two months of video course for DataCamp, 1 month of LinkedIn. The stackskills deal is probably good for the books and backlog. All the books is quite a large library and is better than any humble deal even for 60$. And with humble deal, you can get quite a ton of value. There is not much resources you will require except still reading the foundational knowledge. The books cover cloud, linux, unity, arduino, web technology, android apps, it can be nice just to have as a backlog and for library collection purposes. It is kinda a lot better than spending on some platforms and web courses if you are starting out. And it is pretty much lifetime. There are quite several platforms that offer web courses. But this is also the first time that I see 100 books for sale cheaply along with other resources. The crazy thing is that you can videos for free on Youtube, Udacity, EDX, OpenCourseWare and other resources. If you search for books, you will actually find a lot of sites of free books. There was some kind of giveaway for tech books for Oreilly, PacktHub, Microsoft Press along with SpringerLink so the books are in s
21st Oct 2019, 6:53 AM
Denis Pavlov
Denis Pavlov - avatar
+ 1
The books are in some way free if you just google for free books. Or free machine learning books and OpenCourseWare has machine LearningCourses. Along with Edx, Coursera that have courses than you can enroll for like a week or two before being locked out most of the time. I am not sure why I am sharing the link. It is a referral link (hehe...) sure but I do not know if some can find it a value proposition considering it is 100 books from PacktPub that are pretty much very very legal. Otherwise it is 10$ per month for subscription and no lifetime or pay 20$ per book. Or maybe wait for humble bundle sales. But it also nice to be able to get them legally. Otherwise there are actually a lot of free books. I have not fully explored the free books sections. I have looked at some free books and doing OpenCourseWare courses which are quite nice. :-) I can maybe take online courses and semi-legal books together if find really good ones. Some of the paid online resources and the like are just super expensive. Lifetime legal 100 books on top of some videos might be good resources along with study groups. But I do not see why so many online courses and such there are a lot about tech subjects that are not really MOOCS or school distance learning that do suprisingly well. I am kinda sharing the information about the link. I do not want to see myself self-centric but I am kinda am. It looks fun to have all those books and maybe the vids. I can start a reading challenge of 3 programming book per week on here with the free available programming books and the like. That looks fun because I am not reading that much programming books. I still have to finish all the OpenCourseWare courses and books. xD That sounds a far fetched goal to do machine learning. Machine learning programming is easy but with strong foundational, it is the real deal. And it is fun to learn.
21st Oct 2019, 6:54 AM
Denis Pavlov
Denis Pavlov - avatar
0
There are many sites and books to learn machine learning course but in all CETPA Infotech is the best for all cs/it students to gain placement oriented training in CS/IT/Embedded System and other technologies. To know more visit this website: https://www.cetpainfotech.com/technology/machine-learning
21st Oct 2019, 10:08 AM
shivkumar
shivkumar - avatar