Andrew Nj and Andrej in the same video, this will go down in history!
@selva2794 жыл бұрын
It would have been complete if Chris olah also joined them
@jorjiang19 ай бұрын
stop cheerleading and code yourself
@aitarun7 жыл бұрын
I have to listen Andrej part at 0.75 speed. :)
@gianluke7 жыл бұрын
I've checked a couple of time the youtube settings because I thought the video was accelerated :|
@quietbydayYT7 жыл бұрын
Yes, the sign of a brain limited by the bandwidth of speech. lol
@SaiFi01027 жыл бұрын
Haha, it sounds much better 0.75 :'D
@itttottti7 жыл бұрын
hahaha, show and gone
@pakigya7 жыл бұрын
Thank you. I was watching at 2x speed before lol
@nickang66477 жыл бұрын
Prof Andrew is a really humble person! Thanks for taking the time to interview and share this. 13:02 - Advice for people thinking about entering the field of AI, deep learning
@saikrishnaklu6 жыл бұрын
Thats an amazing reply #13:02
@Thegreatindiaexpedition7 жыл бұрын
Andrew Ng is my hero .... He motivated me the first time from his lecture series on Machine learning
@HarshitMalik6 жыл бұрын
Well said bro!
@ArunSharma-de7mk6 жыл бұрын
Truth has been spoken :)
@anshikakhandelwal26336 жыл бұрын
Ayushman, if you've learnt the art, start transferring it.
@imdadood57053 жыл бұрын
Are you still in this field?
@PrabinKumarRath-kf1rv3 ай бұрын
Awesome to know that Andrej and OpenAI really made it happen! Some of the terms that Andrej mentions AGI, agents, end-to-end models, they were always on the right track! We realized all of this after ChatGPT in 2023
@cupajoesir7 жыл бұрын
The energy present in this discussion is fantastic. Thanks for sharing.
@vladimirbosinceanu57782 жыл бұрын
It's amazing how we can perceive honesty/passion and how we can resonate with it. Thank you Andrew and thank you Andrej!
@bellaggio17706 жыл бұрын
Humbling to hear people who are way smarter than us
@blueborne40314 жыл бұрын
Both of these people are my heroes. I would not have gone into deep learning without them
@curioussand13397 жыл бұрын
Andrej Karpathy talks in such a way that I briefly thought I had the clip running @ 1.25
@VishwajeetVKale20 күн бұрын
these people inspire me the most
@morebaie34125 жыл бұрын
What an amazing interview! Andrej Karpathy is making a great work intersecting NLP with computer vision, it's a huge move in the AI era.
@fabianmarin8514 Жыл бұрын
The two folks from which I've learned the most about AI. Thanks so much!
@mdougf6 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this interview, Andrew; you're the man. And hello to my fellow learners! Is anyone interested in starting a weekly machine learning research paper reading and discussion group with me?
@larjunmnath2 күн бұрын
Honestly, this is like the captain america with ironman kinda scene
@dciug7 жыл бұрын
until 1:40 YES! That is exactly how I felt during the AI class that I took. I really thought that those methods do not deserve to be named AI. NNs and Boltzmann Machines are what really got me started into this field. I can do this all day and not feel tired, and that's awesome.
@sarahjamal865 жыл бұрын
Well he is my hero as well ... because of him I could understand the concepts and implement them before moving to use tensorflow and pytorch. Thanks Karpathy, your contributions to the CS community are so valuable. :-)
@phillaysheo8 Жыл бұрын
Women who like ML are hot 🤩
@kssreesha3 жыл бұрын
This has some of the best insights !!
@adityasoni1217 жыл бұрын
I wonder what will happen if Andrej would cite a story to a toddler... Great Lecturer!!(Really enjoyed CS231N) Thank you..
@guestimator1216 жыл бұрын
+Aditya Soni "..Cooncretely, Hansel has put all the pebbles in his pocket in a way... well, you really don't need to know all of the details of how did he do it to understand the rest o the story, the important thing for you to understand was that he had pebbles in his pocket..."
@shubharthaksangharsha6248 Жыл бұрын
2 legends in one frame
@maciejbalawejder18193 жыл бұрын
10:57 - but that's exactly tesla's approach to self-driving, creating separate models and merge them together
@rajatrao56325 жыл бұрын
Important statement Andrej made was " we truly understand the library/things that abstract away many low level complex things..when we once are in a position to write something from scract low level and then we will be comfortable to use the libraries who are doing the same and modify " truly a great statement
@vq8gef328 ай бұрын
He is a real hero, I am watching his lessons : Love + AI === Andrej
@inilahsaltakadnak7 жыл бұрын
Very insightful. At 10:15 the split of AI is interesting
@AnkitBindal977 жыл бұрын
DFS, BFS, Alpha-beta pruning....... Exactly! Even undergraduates are taught these things. It's nowhere near what is actually happening in machine learning.
@preethamgali30234 жыл бұрын
Exactly, implementing from scratch does help one to understand better.
@BrutalStrike22 жыл бұрын
Now Andrej made own mini course on his KZbin
@mynameisZhenyaArt_7 жыл бұрын
thanks for preserving knowledge :)
@benitoteehankee30146 жыл бұрын
"... not decomposing but having a single neural network, a complete dynamical system, that you're always working with -- a full agent. The question is: 'How do you actually create objectives such that when you optimize over the weights to make up that brain, you get intelligent behavior out?' " Really interesting. That sounds a lot like the goal of teaching human beings, too. How do you teach without decomposing knowledge into subjects and teach from a holistic point of view?
@stock996 жыл бұрын
Benito Teehankee this question is the best part of the entire interview to me. Good question is half of the answer. Digging into it.... Very interesting..
@iamr0b0tx2 ай бұрын
Proof that Andrej is an LLM 1:00 😅
@bntagkas4 жыл бұрын
i have to listen to this at 1.25 speed only instead of usualy 1.5 or 1.75, nice
@relganz46637 жыл бұрын
12:55 best part. Whatever his idea is, it's probably right. But why no question about Tesla? not even high level?
@6thHorseMan7 жыл бұрын
Start out with what is under the hood and build your knowledge from there. To fully understand ML you can't just be a library user.
@jackxiao81406 ай бұрын
Love the little laugh at 12:58
@YULi-qf1wq7 жыл бұрын
Andrej is less confident than he was in cs231 class but cuter for his humbleness in this interview without any direct gaze to camera :D
@ChandlerRandolph-yc5re Жыл бұрын
very informative!
@motiurrahman7 жыл бұрын
Such a cool interview - the mentor interviewing the mentee.
@MartinLichtblau6 жыл бұрын
Our biggest fallacy: if we model each human ability by hand we will have a AI. Same fallacy was committed before with feature modelling. Today we know better. Or at least we thought so..... unreflected we are!
@5gururaj56 жыл бұрын
I turned it to 1.25x as usual, and I had to switch back to 1x 😄
@myspacetimesaucegoog56327 жыл бұрын
I'm super keen to hear how Andrei's ideas for an overall "just learn everything about everything" type AI progress. I kind of imagine a "baby" AI system following humans around watching imitating absorbing and learning - somehow., gradually growing up...
@randywelt82107 жыл бұрын
Can please explain anyone ctc loss and beam search decoding in numpy? That is implemented in tensorflow, but it is really hard to understand what is going on.
@dgimop7 жыл бұрын
In case you have not yet figured this out: I skimmed over the CTC paper, cited by tensorflow, for a minute. Are you talking about how CTC works as a whole or only about how the cost/loss is calculated in the softmax (output) layer, as in how the loss function works for this classification algo? I can give some pointers on what I understood about the latter. My explanation might be either naive or complicated, depending on how deeply you understand ML. CTC calculates the cost of an error using the principles of maximum likelihood estimation (MLE). In particular, 'minimising it [the cost function] maximises the log likelihoods of the target labellings' - as the authors say. To label the output, it uses one extra unit in the softmax layer than the number of output labels, unlike traditional methods that use as many output units as there are labels to classify. The extra unit is reserved for observing a 'blank' or 'no label' class. If my understanding is correct, this gives the algorithm some breathing room to skip over labelling the data that is does not understand correctly and save it for later (?) rather than falsely classifying it as one of the labels because it was forced to do so. Couldn't get the time to learn about beam search decoding :)
@malikhamza92863 жыл бұрын
This is the first video I haven't watched in 1.25 or 1.5x
@waynelau32563 ай бұрын
The two gods
@phillaysheo8 Жыл бұрын
"It's not rocket science or nuclear physics" 😀 "You just need to know linear algebra and calculus" 😔
@markhofstede6 жыл бұрын
Would love to see him speak with Elon!
@godspeed1334 жыл бұрын
He now works for Elon (maybe he had started by then and you knew(?))
@israel_abebe7 жыл бұрын
what course is he talking about?
@taylordelehanty80087 жыл бұрын
Israel Abebe they're talking about the Stanford course here cs231n.stanford.edu
@michaellidster13895 жыл бұрын
Heroes hey
@omeryalcn57976 жыл бұрын
Warning !! real time of video is 20.1333333333 :)
@-mwolf Жыл бұрын
10:55
@hasnainabbasdilawar88327 жыл бұрын
This guy talks fast!
@realGBx646 жыл бұрын
It is so weird for me when they emphasize the importance of knowing the basics. InEastern Europe we learned almost everything from bottom up. I had abstract maths before calculus, wrote algorithms on paper, calculated matrix determinants by hand, etc.
@ehfo6 жыл бұрын
he talks so fast!
@abdAlmajedSaleh7 ай бұрын
I didn't know it was dog network.
@KaiyuZheng5 жыл бұрын
I actually didn’t set the speed to 2
@BrianBull6 жыл бұрын
Tesla AKnet
@dvm5097 жыл бұрын
when AI god speaks ...
@rubixcom6 жыл бұрын
hang on... but had he actually trained himself on that dataset, he would be performing better than ML
@Jerry-yy1qy4 жыл бұрын
说话速度有点快
@dexmoe7 жыл бұрын
human benchmark lol
@tianshiliao53727 жыл бұрын
Just not a big fan of udemy ML ads.. spent 20 hrs on it without learning the proper definition and math expression of cost function.. what a waste of time I have to say
@dgimop7 жыл бұрын
The course Andrew NG was talking about is in Coursera, not Udemy, if I understand your concern correctly. This is a brand new specialization. However, the best available Machine Learning course online, in my opinion, is Andrew NG's own course titled 'Machine Learning'. It's absolutely amazing, very detailed and free. It is probably the very first online ML course. I dropped out of a grad course at the university and spent that entire semester on this course. It eased me into my grad research.
@StanislavMasharsky5 жыл бұрын
А почему такое всратое качество в 2017-м году?
@CorporateDrone2 жыл бұрын
It isn’t obvious to me that Andrej is not a genius
@surfermx3 жыл бұрын
Mercedes-Benz is already level 3, while Tesla is just level 2, this weirdo seems has no noticed it yet
@Tom-ku8bu2 жыл бұрын
Mercedes is only level 3 on certain situations on the highway but Tesla is on the way to be highest level on any road and every situation. The computer of the Tesla's are probably more powerful than of Mercedes. But why do you mention it on a video that is 5 years old? At that time Mercedes was no where with self driving and in Tesla's it was already an early not so good version available. Now fsd beta gets every update better and is already pretty amazing how it handles heavy traffic in cities which Mercedes can't.
@samahirrao7 жыл бұрын
Andrew Ng does not feel like a good person.. Kind of started hating him. But his research is no doubt great.
@Samir_Zope7 жыл бұрын
Why is he not good person?
@reetigarg73987 жыл бұрын
R1nz0R I think it's largely because of the way he interacts with others. But I think you're mistaken there, he might come across as not a good guy when he actually is.
@Samir_Zope7 жыл бұрын
Reeti Garg imo he actually seems like a kind person but ok xD
@myspacetimesaucegoog56327 жыл бұрын
Gosh I thought Andrew seems an extremely good person, watching him in this video.