Skip to main content

Google and Udacity are bringing a free deep learning course to you

If knowledge is money in this progressive society of ours, then Google is seriously spreading the wealth. On Thursday, the Silicon Valley giant announced the launch of a “new deep learning course developed in collaboration with Udacity.” As machine learning continues its upward trend in the tech industry, promising to be the catalyst of the next great wave of innovation, Google is hoping that its generosity may give rise to some pretty incredible discoveries. And with the help of Udacity, which already plays host to a variety of free online courses, if you’ve got three months to spare (at the rate of six hours per week), you can learn all about deep learning.

Deep learning has become one of the hottest topics in machine learning in recent years,” wrote Vincent Vanhoucke, principal research scientist on Google’s Research Blog. “With TensorFlow, the deep learning platform that we recently released as an open-source project, our goal was to bring the capabilities of deep learning to everyone.” Already, Google boasts more than 4,000 participants on GitHub in just a few weeks, and notes that TensorFlow “has been starred more than 16,000 times by enthusiasts around the globe.”

Recommended Videos

But while this approach may have been ideal for those at least somewhat familiar with machine and/or deep learning, others who have yet to be exposed to this new technology may need a bit more help. Enter Udacity.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Described as a “short, intensive course,” Google promises that the curriculum “provides you with all the basic tools and vocabulary to get started with deep learning, and walks you through how to use it to address some of the most common machine learning problems.”

Sure, it’s still not meant for the absolute layman — you’ll probably need some sort of familiarity with the technology, and being an engineer and data scientist never hurt anyone. In fact, it’s recommended that you bring at least two years of programming experience with you into the course. But it’s still a step in the right direction when it comes to accessibility.

“Our overall goal in designing this course was to provide the machine learning enthusiast a rapid and direct path to solving real and interesting problems with deep learning techniques,” Vanhoucke concluded. “We hope you enjoy it!”

Lulu Chang
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Fascinated by the effects of technology on human interaction, Lulu believes that if her parents can use your new app…
What to expect at CES 2025: drone-launching vans, mondo TVs, AI everywhere
CES 2018 Show Floor

With 2024 behind us, all eyes in tech turn to Las Vegas, where tech monoliths and scrappy startups alike are suiting up to give us a glimpse of the future. What tech trends will set the world afire in 2025? While we won’t know all the details until we hit the carpets of the Las Vegas Convention Center, our team of reporters and editors have had an ear to the ground for months. And we have a pretty good idea what’s headed your way.

Here’s a sneak peek at all the gizmos, vehicles, technologies, and spectacles we expect to light up Las Vegas next week.
Computing

Read more
These unique smart glasses skirt hype and solve a real medical problem
Front view of the SolidddVision smartglasses.

Smart glasses are increasingly being pushed as the future of personal computing. But so far, an overwhelming majority have focused on aspects like social media sharing, pulling up AI agents, or media consumption. Soliddd wants to push smart glasses into a challenging niche of medical science.

At CES 2025, the New York City-based company introduced SolidddVision smart glasses. Soliddd claims these are “the first true vision correction for people living with vision loss due to macular degeneration.” Notably, these glasses won’t require any FDA clearance and will enter the market later this year.

Read more
People don’t trust tech. CES 2025 is a chance to change that
The LG booth at CES 2024.

When I attended my first Consumer Electronics Show in 2007, friends reacted as if I were going to the World’s Fair in 1933. What technological wonders would I see? What wizardry? What further evidence of mankind’s supremacy?

The stories I brought back seldom disappointed: TVs the size of bedroom walls! Flying cars! HD-DVDs! OK, maybe that last one is a poor example.

Read more