I’m in the process of transitioning from my current career in teaching to the NLP career via the Python path and while I’ve been learning on my own for about three months now I’ve found it a bit too slow and wanted to see if there’s a good course (described in the title) that’s really worth the money and time investment and would make things easier for someone like me?

One important requirement is that (for this purpose) I’ve no interest in exclusively self-study courses where you are supposed to watch videos or read text on your own without ever meeting anyone in real-time.

  • @[email protected]OP
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    11 month ago

    Thanks a lot! I appreciate the effort you’ve put into the responses. In general, what concepts would you expect an entry level NLP job to require to know from its applicants? I think I’ll stick to learning on my own with an occasional tutor/coach down the line.

    • @simplymath
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      21 month ago

      I’m not sure there are “entry level” NLP jobs that aren’t for sketchy startups without a future. I can’t imagine using openai APIs is a stable career as much as knowing how to make them.

      If you were a senior programmer, there are roles that don’t need so much math – DevOps, reliability engineering, cloud deployment, and systems administration are some keywords you can look up on LinkedIn. These are quite broad and would be available at basically any company with a website or app.

      Personally, I got an undegrad degree in applied mathematics and only kept going to school because the roles I wanted (ML development) required it. Your background in linguistics could certainly be useful for a team in which other people are the coding and math experts, but I do not come across those roles on LinkedIn very often outside of academia, which, unfortunately, require the degree.

      Its really good to hear that the Andrew Ng class is comprehensible to you, so I think you’re on the right track either way.

      In lieu of a degree, the only other thing I can suggest is building a portfolio online (GitHub, probably) and maybe contributing to an open source project. It will be very hard to find roles that don’t require you to know git and contribute to complex software projects, whether or not you have a degree.

      • @[email protected]OP
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        11 month ago

        Very insightful and inspiring! Would you suggest an example git project I could now start contributing to?

        • @simplymath
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          11 month ago

          Honestly? I have no idea what things you can contribute to since I don’t know your skillset, interests, background, etc.

          Do not underestimate how much you will be disadvantaged by not having relevant degrees and published papers, but if you can start closing tickets in the Tensorflow repository then more power to you.