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by forgetsusername
3722 days ago
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>I completely disagree Don't worry, as with anything there's a certain subset of people who actually know the underlying principles behind a subject, and for some reason feel threatened when those principles are abstracted away, as if their knowledge is now wasted. But that's the natural progression of things. Sorry. It's funny it happens in a community of programmers though, where half of the tools that are used everyday are blackboxes that few really understand. Like the computer itself. |
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For example deep-learning really revolutionized the state of the art in image recognition in 2012 by winning academic competitions. It took about 3-5 years for those deep learning algorithms to get productized into packages like tensorflow, with high production tutorials and videos, so it was accessible to non-academics.
I don't think people that know the underlying principles of machine learning are threatened (Thats sounds like pretty insecure world view on your part). They operate in a different context where you want to push the state of the art in machine learning algorithms, instead of just applying existing best-practices to your specific problem.