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by IC4RUS
2396 days ago
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I agree that it might not be a large portion of all CS students, but it does appear that many of the incoming CS PhDs have chosen to go into ML (of my class, maybe 1/3), which serious distracts from interest in other subfields. It's actually a joke in my department that all of the new students are pursuing ML, while almost no one is pursuing theoretical CS or other less popular subfields. I'm also not sure about why the exact number matters - 200 kids matters a lot when future professors are drawn from the pool of students who have successfully completed a PhD. |
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I saw the same thing happen in the late 1990s as everybody and his dog got into web design while it was hot. Few of those folks are doing that now, nor did that skill translate well into other roles since the skill set isn't fundamental to other careers.
I'm not sure ML is any different, especially deep learning, since few companies have anywhere near the necessary amount of data to successfully play that game and win.