Torrent details for "Udemy - Building Recommender Systems with Machine Learning and AI"    Log in to bookmark

wide
Torrent details
Cover
Download
Torrent rating (0 rated)
Controls:
Category:
Language:
English English
Total Size:
4.51 GB
Info Hash:
a8a0335b3ea53ecfd2c6ef7d53da3df76e1be81e
Added By:
Added:  
18-11-2020 16:50
Views:
793
Health:
Seeds:
1
Leechers:
1
Completed:
22
wide




Description
wide
Image error
Description

New! Updated for Tensorflow 2, Amazon Personalize, and more.

Learn how to build recommender systems from one of Amazon’s pioneers in the field. Frank Kane spent over nine years at Amazon, where he managed and led the development of many of Amazon’s personalized product recommendation technologies.

You’ve seen automated recommendations everywhere – on Netflix’s home page, on YouTube, and on Amazon as these machine learning algorithms learn about your unique interests, and show the best products or content for you as an individual. These technologies have become central to the  largest, most prestigious tech employers out there, and by understanding how they work, you’ll become very valuable to them.

We’ll cover tried and true recommendation algorithms based on neighborhood-based collaborative filtering, and work our way up to more modern techniques including matrix factorization and even deep learning with artificial neural networks. Along the way, you’ll learn from Frank’s extensive industry experience to understand the real-world challenges you’ll encounter when applying these algorithms at large scale and with real-world data.

Recommender systems are complex; don’t enroll in this course expecting a learn-to-code type of format. There’s no recipe to follow on how to make a recommender system; you need to understand the different algorithms and how to choose when to apply each one for a given situation. We assume you already know how to code.

However, this course is very hands-on; you’ll develop your own framework for evaluating and combining many different recommendation algorithms together, and you’ll even build your own neural networks using Tensorflow to generate recommendations from real-world movie ratings from real people. We’ll cover:

   Building a recommendation engine
   Evaluating recommender systems
   Content-based filtering using item attributes
   Neighborhood-based collaborative filtering with user-based, item-based, and KNN CF
   Model-based methods including matrix factorization and SVD
   Applying deep learning, AI, and artificial neural networks to recommendations
   Session-based recommendations with recursive neural networks
   Scaling to massive data sets with Apache Spark machine learning, Amazon DSSTNE deep learning, and AWS SageMaker with factorization machines
   Real-world challenges and solutions with recommender systems
   Case studies from YouTube and Netflix
   Building hybrid, ensemble recommenders

This comprehensive course takes you all the way from the early days of collaborative filtering, to bleeding-edge applications of deep neural networks and modern machine learning techniques for recommending the best items to every individual user.

The coding exercises in this course use the Python programming language. We include an intro to Python if you’re new to it, but you’ll need some prior programming experience in order to use this course successfully. We also include a short introduction to deep learning if you are new to the field of artificial intelligence, but you’ll need to be able to understand new computer algorithms.

High-quality, hand-edited English closed captions are included to help you follow along.

I hope to see you in the course soon!
Who this course is for:

   Software developers interested in applying machine learning and deep learning to product or content recommendations
   Engineers working at, or interested in working at large e-commerce or web companies
   Computer Scientists interested in the latest recommender system theory and research

Requirements

   A Windows, Mac, or Linux PC with at least 3GB of free disk space.
   Some experience with a programming or scripting language (preferably Python)
   Some computer science background, and an ability to understand new algorithms.

Last Updated 8/2020

  User comments    Sort newest first

No comments have been posted yet.



Post anonymous comment
  • Comments need intelligible text (not only emojis or meaningless drivel).
  • No upload requests, visit the forum or message the uploader for this.
  • Use common sense and try to stay on topic.

  • :) :( :D :P :-) B) 8o :? 8) ;) :-* :-( :| O:-D Party Pirates Yuk Facepalm :-@ :o) Pacman Shit Alien eyes Ass Warn Help Bad Love Joystick Boom Eggplant Floppy TV Ghost Note Msg


    CAPTCHA Image 

    Anonymous comments have a moderation delay and show up after 15 minutes