Some Microsoft employees offer an AI course, but Microsoft is not serious yet

Kirk Borne @KirkDBorne Microsoft launched a free, 12-week course on #AI for Beginners — publicly available for free on GitHub: https://microsoft.github.io/AI-For-Beginners/
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#BigData #DataScience #MachineLearning #DeepLearning #Algorithms #DataScientists #NeuralNetworks #ComputerVision #NLProc #Ontologies https://pic.twitter.com/TdpXOVZ1N4
Replying to @KirkDBorne

Kirk, a select few offer an ‘intro to AI’ course at Microsoft, which employs about 240,000 individuals of diverse skill and reliability. Microsoft might showcase ‘AI’, but they are not applying open methods to legacy operations. Nor seriously helping map global and systemic issues.

For full disclosure, I am talking this out with OpenAI ChatGPT Plus. I cannot share that conversation because neither OpenAI, nor X, nor Microsoft, nor Google, nor any other AI vendor stores and shares conversations in a global open form which supports merging, comparisons, summaries, reports, or massive online collaborations that could have hundreds of millions of humans and their AIs.

ChatGPT suggested: “Kirk, only a select few at Microsoft, with its 240,000 diverse employees, are offering an ‘intro to AI’ course. While Microsoft showcases ‘AI’, there’s a notable absence of applying open AI methods to their legacy systems. Additionally, they aren’t making significant efforts to utilize AI in addressing global and systemic issues.”

Richard Collins, The Internet Foundation

Richard K Collins

About: Richard K Collins

Director, The Internet Foundation Studying formation and optimized collaboration of global communities. Applying the Internet to solve global problems and build sustainable communities. Internet policies, standards and best practices.


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