Until now, the rhetoric surrounding AI was on the lines of a
heated race among big tech firms to acquire top AI startups, many of which were
in the early stages of research and funding for bolstering bench strength and
adding to the product capabilities.
The frenetic M&A activity was dubbed as
the AI arms race but of late, this arms race has acquired a new slant –
evangelizing the ecosystem with a slew of educational offerings that would in
turn create a formidable workforce in AI, solve hiring crunch and add to the
internal talent pipeline.
Earlier this month, Redmond giant Microsoft just opened an
AI learning track to the public – making training courses available for
everyone. Here’s what the public can learn – a) Intro to AI; b) Python for data
science; c) Math & Statistics; d) Ethics for AI; f)
Deep Learning. Through
the program, developers can acquire job-ready skills and real-world experience,
shore up their skills in AI and data science through a series of online courses
that feature hands-on labs and expert instructors, notes the company blog.
NVIDIA has been successfully running self-paced online
certifications such as Fundamentals for Deep Learning for Computer Vision &
Fundamentals for Deep Learning with Multi-GPU for those who wish to learn how
to train and deploy neural networks for deep learning and accelerate
applications with NVIDIA CUDA and opencast.
WHY BIG TECH FIRMS ARE STEPPING UP TO DEMOCRATIZE AI WITH FREE MOOCS?
So, why are tech companies rushing to launch free moocs to
bring AI and machine learning to the masses? There is definitely an overarching
theme to this facet of IT giants evangelizing the ecosystem by taking a lead in
providing AI & ML fundamentals to the public – tech giants want to continue
to be a leader in AI by delivering high-level primers on artificial intelligence.
But how are free moocs aligned with the business goals?
While the marketplace for AI tools is booming, tech savvy companies like
Microsoft, Google, NVIDIA, and Amazon are trying to find a middle ground
between experimentation and implementation.
Big tech giants have pumped
billions of dollars into AI tools and frameworks that can open up exciting new
possibilities across the verticals – be it human capital management, robo
advisory in finance or improving patient services. But the potential of these
services just doesn’t end there.
Every major enterprise or startup is implementing algorithms
at scale, which makes it important for organizations to maintain accurate data
and carefully review these tools for accuracy and potential bias.
So, while on one spectrum, big tech firms like Amazon,
Google & Microsoft have rolled out enterprise tools for startups and
companies to do ML at scale, the next logical segue is to enable people to get
smarter together to use AI tools effectively. Big tech firms have realized that
human role is crucial to strengthening AI capabilities.
AI & workforce have to get smarter together — we
enumerates top reasons why big tech companies are investing money into training
AI workforce with publicly available courses
Bridge The Workforce Gap: According to Susan Dumas,
distinguished scientist and assistant director of Microsoft Research AI, the
most important reason for launching free, publicly available AI training
courses is to lend a broader push throughout the technology industry to fill a
gap in workers with skills in artificial intelligence.
“AI is increasingly
important in how our products and services are designed and delivered and that
is true for our customers as well. Fundamentally, we are all interested in
developing talent that is able to build, understand and design systems that
have AI as a central component.,” she added.
Get trained in vendor-specific tools: The recently launched Microsoft
course covers the offerings such as Microsoft Cognitive Services, that enables
developers to incorporate intelligent algorithms for computer vision, natural
language processing and translation capabilities into their products, and the
Azure Bot Service. These programs are part of a larger corporate effort to woo
developer community with focused courses on vendor-specific tools and services.
The next job market is the knowledge market: Given how STEM
education is gaining popularity among non-IT professionals and there is high
adoption of moocs among the non-IT bracket as well, smart companies have
recognized the challenge and are putting into practice mechanisms to ensure the
availability of personnel needed to tackle AI, ML-focused roles.
Eventually,
big tech firms like AWS & Google want enterprises and startups to make the
most out of their offerings like automl or Gluon which can happen when the workforce
is adequately trained.
OUTLOOK
Mainstreaming AI into enterprise and businesses calls for open
source AI frameworks and tools but also needs requisite training and skill
building of a wide swath of employees working. At the end of the day, Google
and Microsoft are making an attempt to balance out the investment ratio between
investing in AI-based technologies and framework and AI workforce.
To emerge as
a leader in AI race, big tech firms need to strike the right balance of tech
and personnel – that explains the investment in continuous lifelong learning in
emergent technologies.
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