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by nabla9
2394 days ago
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> So while this looks like a great resource - who’s it for? I give you an analogy. Electricity. Who needs to know complex numbers and differential equations to understand electricity? Technician, civil engineer, scientist or research engineer? Technician who just wires the house don't need math. They just read the wiring instructions and follow standard practices. Nvidia boasts about the tools it builds for 'ML technicians' in this analogy. You need to know math if you are building new architectures and applying complex models for something nontrivial. It's not going to work first time and you need to know what's going on. Even if you are the 'civil engineer' in this analogy you should be able to read the math and understand it even if you don't do the math by yourself. You won't be able to do literary research and learn new stuff if you can't read math fluently. If you are programmer who is given ML tools to implement something someone else designed and understand you don't need this or use existing models, you don't need this. Your career might benefit from knowing it but you can manage without. |
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