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by electronvolt
3340 days ago
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I'll have to watch this later, but I'd argue the issue, at least for me, isn't really surface level understanding. (At least, the kind I think could plausibly be imparted in 4 minutes. :)) The basic idea of deep learning has always seemed straightforward to me[0]. However, at least my perception is that it feels like there's a lot of deep magic going on in the details at the level that Google/Microsoft/Amazon/researchers are doing deep learning. That's honestly true of most active research areas[1], but since those results are also the results that keep getting a lot of attention, the "it's a black box" feeling makes sense to me. :) [0] Having done both some moderately high level math and having a CS background, I feel like most ideas in CS fit this description, though. Our devil is the details. [1] For instance: fairly recent results in weird applications of type theory are also super cool, and require some serious wizardry, but those get much less attention. (And are, I think, more taken for granted, since who doesn't understand a type system? /s) |
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You're right that it can take some time to do this edification work and develop the understanding for yourself -- the research is broader and more specialized than it appears at first glance -- and it does help to be surrounded by smart people puzzling over the same types of problems, but there's very little secret magic here. It is, however, of benefit to these companies to develop a public image of exclusivity and wizardry in their research; I fell into this trap too, before I saw how the sausage is made.
If you want to make your own fundamental innovations in deep learning, it can be very resource-intensive, both computationally and otherwise. However, it is easy to apply the current state-of-the-art to a broad spectrum of applications in novel ways.
One of the reasons I left is that I think there is a big opportunity in applying these powerful basic principles and approaches to more domains. The research companies are, IMO, focused on businesses that are or have the potential to become very, very large, and that can take advantage of their ability to leverage massive amounts of capital. This leaves many openings for new medium-sized businesses. Of course, as you grow, you can take stabs at progressively larger problems.