When
2:15 PM Sunday
Where
Town Square A
Silicon Valley Code Camp : October 19 & 20, 2019session

Easy Path to Machine Learning

Developers today are creating insightful tools like never before with machine learning. However, not everyone has the background to jump straight into scikit-learn or TensorFlow. In this session, learn how to access Google's pretrained models by API.

About This Session

We live in the era of big data, and modern tools have been developed to help analyze this vast amount of data as well as using data to discover new, never-before-seen patterns.
Developers are using analysis tools to query data, but also machine learning to discern patterns that weren't possible before. With scikit-learn, pandas, PyTorch, and TensorFlow, the possibilities are endless. However, not everyone has the AI/ML nor math background to jump straight into tools like those. In this session, attendees will learn how to *use* machine learning through a set of APIs provided in the Google Cloud Platform.

By being a user of machine learning, developers will learn the terminology and the steps necessary to one day be able to fully build & train their own machine learning models then validate & deploy them to make predictions on new data. This session provides an easier on-ramp to working with machine learning by taking advantage of Google's pre-trained models accessible via API.

The specific APIs covered include the Google Cloud...
* Natural Language API
* Vision API
* Speech-to-Text API
* Text-to-Speech API
* Video Intelligence API
* BigQuery API

Each API will be demonstrated in Python for brevity. (Other languages are supported of course.) Finally, the AutoML feature will be discussed, allowing developers to customize and further train Google's APIs so that they're more appropriate for your data and being able to do so without a sophisticated machine learning background.


Time: 2:15 PM Sunday    Room: Town Square A 

The Speaker(s)

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Wesley Chun

developer advocate , CyberWeb & Google

WESLEY CHUN is author of the "Core Python" books and an engineer & Developer Advocate at Google.