Top products from r/ArtificialInteligence

We found 4 product mentions on r/ArtificialInteligence. We ranked the 3 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top comments that mention products on r/ArtificialInteligence:

u/galahadredgrave · 9 pointsr/ArtificialInteligence

I'm just beginning this journey myself, so judge what I say accordingly.

Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach seems to be the most popular textbook.

This article has some seemingly good advice, though it seems to be geared more toward Machine Learning (ML) than AI in general.

I think you'll want to learn a programming language. The above article recommends Python as it is well suited to ML.

There is (was?) a free online course on ML from Stanford by Andrew Ng. I started to take it a couple years ago but never finished. It is very accessible. The lectures appear to be on YouTube.

Grokking Algorithms is a highly regarded book on algorithms.

Make a free Amazon Web Services account and start playing with Sagemaker.

There really is no well defined path to learning AI, in my opinion. It is a highly interdisciplinary endeavor that will require you to be a self-starting autodidact. It's very exciting though. There is still plenty of new ground to be broken. Some might argue it is difficult for the little guy to compete with big labs at the big tech companies with their ungodly amounts of data to feed their AI, but I am optimistic.

u/th00masml · 2 pointsr/ArtificialInteligence

Well, I don't know if it is done yet, but if not soon it will be.

Here is interesting book on a topic:

https://www.amazon.com/Artificial-Intelligence-HR-Successful-Workforce/dp/0749483814

If anybody is using tool you mentioned, I think it may be Amazon. Of course.