Jeremy Howard — The Story of fast.ai and Why Python Is Not the Future of ML
Jeremy Howard is a founding researcher at fast.ai, a research institute dedicated to making Deep Learning more accessible. Previously, he was the CEO and Founder at Enlitic, an advanced machine learning company in San Francisco, California. Howard is a faculty member at Singularity University, where he teaches data science. He is also a Young Global Leader with the World Economic Forum, and spoke at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2014 on "Jobs For The Machines." Howard advised Khosla Ventures as their Data Strategist, identifying the biggest opportunities for investing in data-driven startups and mentoring their portfolio companies to build data-driven businesses. Howard was the founding CEO of two successful Australian startups, FastMail and Optimal Decisions Group. Before that, he spent eight years in management consulting, at McKinsey & Company and AT Kearney. TOPICS COVERED: 0:00 Introduction 0:52 Dad things 2:40 The story of Fast.ai 4:57 How the courses have evolved over time 9:24 Jeremy’s top down approach to teaching 13:02 From Fast.ai the course to Fast.ai the library 15:08 Designing V2 of the library from the ground up 21:44 The ingenious type dispatch system that powers Fast.ai 25:52 Were you able to realize the vision behind v2 of the library 28:05 Is it important to you that Fast.ai is used by everyone in the world, beyond the context of learning 29:37 Real world applications of Fast.ai, including animal husbandry 35:08 Staying ahead of the new developments in the field 38:50 A bias towards learning by doing 40:02 What’s next for Fast.ai 40.35 Python is not the future of Machine Learning 43:58 One underrated aspect of machine learning 45:25 Biggest challenge of machine learning in the real world Follow Jeremy on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jeremyphoward Links: Deep learning R&D & education: http://fast.ai Software: http://docs.fast.ai Book: http://up.fm/book Course: http://course.fast.ai Papers: The business impact of deep learning https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/2487575.2491127 De-identification Methods for Open Health Data https://www.jmir.org/2012/1/e33/ Visit our podcasts homepage for transcripts and more episodes! www.wandb.com/podcast 🔊 Get our podcast on Soundcloud, Apple, and Spotify! YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/WeightsBiases Apple Podcasts: https://bit.ly/2WdrUvI Spotify: https://bit.ly/2SqtadF We started Weights and Biases to build tools for Machine Learning practitioners because we care a lot about the impact that Machine Learning can have in the world and we love working in the trenches with the people building these models. One of the most fun things about these building tools has been the conversations with these ML practitioners and learning about the interesting things they’re working on. This process has been so fun that we wanted to open it up to the world in the form of our new podcast called Gradient Dissent. We hope you have as much fun listening to it as we had making it! 👩🏼🚀Weights and Biases: We’re always free for academics and open source projects. Email carey@wandb.com with any questions or feature suggestions. - Blog: https://www.wandb.com/articles - Gallery: See what you can create with W&B - https://app.wandb.ai/gallery - Continue the conversation on our slack community - http://bit.ly/wandb-forum 🎙Host: Lukas Biewald - https://twitter.com/l2k 👩🏼💻Producer: Lavanya Shukla - https://twitter.com/lavanyaai 📹Editor: Cayla Sharp - http://caylasharp.com/
From "Gradient Dissent: Conversations on AI"
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