BAIR: If we’ve ever spoke face-to-face about AI, there’s a very good chance you’ve heard me mentioning the Berkeley AI Research (BAIR) blog, as it is my number-one, all-time-favorite AI blog out there — and for two reasons: one, their main focus is Deep Reinforcement Learning, which I personally find the most interesting and most promising field in AI research. Second, and far more important, their ability to explain in simple words, using intuition and common logic, their fascinating and not-so-trivial concepts and ideas. I can only recommend you to follow them too.
SAIL: Stanford University doesn’t need an introduction. Being the academic home of figures as Andrew Ng and Yoav Shoham, Stanford AI Lab (SAIL) blog is certainly a great source to be checked frequently.
MIT: Another academic institute which you’ve probably already heard about, MIT News on Artificial Intelligence and MIT Technology Review on Artificial Intelligence both feel like an AI-dedicated branch of TechCrunch, and are recommended and a contradicting reading-genre than the other two mentioned above.
BAIR: If we’ve ever spoke face-to-face about AI, there’s a very good chance you’ve heard me mentioning the Berkeley AI Research (BAIR) blog, as it is my number-one, all-time-favorite AI blog out there — and for two reasons: one, their main focus is Deep Reinforcement Learning, which I personally find the most interesting and most promising field in AI research. Second, and far more important, their ability to explain in simple words, using intuition and common logic, their fascinating and not-so-trivial concepts and ideas. I can only recommend you to follow them too.
SAIL: Stanford University doesn’t need an introduction. Being the academic home of figures as Andrew Ng and Yoav Shoham, Stanford AI Lab (SAIL) blog is certainly a great source to be checked frequently.
MIT: Another academic institute which you’ve probably already heard about, MIT News on Artificial Intelligence and MIT Technology Review on Artificial Intelligence both feel like an AI-dedicated branch of TechCrunch, and are recommended and a contradicting reading-genre than the other two mentioned above.
(post is archived)