I realise that; also that it doesn't help that afaiui it's been more industry-led than academia.
But I truly am starting from pretty much 'zero', and maybe I wasn't clear but I'm not looking to be 'hero' in the sense of up to date with the cutting edge, or even necessarily putting anything in to practice at all, I'm more interested in the background theory, and fine with that missing the absolute latest extra technique, just want to understand the meat of it better.
A refresher on SVMs & PCA (which I barely remember - I think I could convincingly explain SVMs to someone numerate but non-tech/mathematician, but not otherwise) and then a catch up to roughly what's going on with LLMs & image/video as mentioned would be great.
> I can understand that you might be interested in book form only, I was lile this for the longest time, until I bumped into some really high quality video series that changed my mind to be a bit more flexible.
I enjoy videos for many things, but mostly entertainment, I don't personally find I can learn that well from them, especially more technical/theoretical stuff, sure to some combination of screen fatigue, it being harder to skip around and reference something, and distraction - something seems obvious briefly so my mind wonders, check something in another tab 'just quickly', and before you know it ten minutes have passed, I've been hearing the speaking but suddenly realise I haven't been listening, have no idea what's going on any more.
But I truly am starting from pretty much 'zero', and maybe I wasn't clear but I'm not looking to be 'hero' in the sense of up to date with the cutting edge, or even necessarily putting anything in to practice at all, I'm more interested in the background theory, and fine with that missing the absolute latest extra technique, just want to understand the meat of it better.
A refresher on SVMs & PCA (which I barely remember - I think I could convincingly explain SVMs to someone numerate but non-tech/mathematician, but not otherwise) and then a catch up to roughly what's going on with LLMs & image/video as mentioned would be great.
> I can understand that you might be interested in book form only, I was lile this for the longest time, until I bumped into some really high quality video series that changed my mind to be a bit more flexible.
I enjoy videos for many things, but mostly entertainment, I don't personally find I can learn that well from them, especially more technical/theoretical stuff, sure to some combination of screen fatigue, it being harder to skip around and reference something, and distraction - something seems obvious briefly so my mind wonders, check something in another tab 'just quickly', and before you know it ten minutes have passed, I've been hearing the speaking but suddenly realise I haven't been listening, have no idea what's going on any more.
Obviously they work for some people, that's fine.