Introduction

A few months ago I discovered fast.ai’s fastbook. It was released in August with an accompanying set of YouTube videos that serves as an introductory course in the topic of deep learning. The content is made very approachable by the authors Jeremy Howard, Rachel Thomas, and Sylvain Gugger.

I already had a cursory knowledge of AI having taken a class in college, but I wanted to dive deeper into the inner workings — ideally all the way to the metal. I purchased the book on Amazon in August, but I’ve been slow to go through it since some of the video lectures are rather long, and I learn far better by reading and doing versus listening.

This week I’ve decided to pick up where I left off. I had been thinking about starting a early today (why not), and one of the sections of the book/lecture specifically calls out the advantages of starting your own blog which is rather strange for a book about deep learning. Anyway, that section of the book pushed me over the edge, so now here we are.

To give a quick introduction of myself: My name is Jerred Shepherd. I’m a software engineer working at Amazon Web Services. I work on problems regarding distributed systems and scalability which has been really fun. I love computers and programming, and I often spend my free time working on side projects as a hobby.

Recent posts from blogs that I like

Xecast Episode 1: Origins and Techaro

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Also catch Xecast on YouTube (I'll make a proper podcast feed soon, trying to de-scope so I can actually get things done).

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These show notes were generated using Google Gemini 1.5 Pro. Should this podcast take off, we'll find a be...

via Xe Iaso

What can I do if IMlangConvertCharset is unable to convert from code page 28591 directly to UTF-8?

You can do the conversion in two steps using things you already have. The post What can I do if IMlangConvertCharset is unable to convert from code page 28591 directly to UTF-8? appeared first on The Old New Thing.

via The Old New Thing

Swimming in July

Just the pure physical joy of thrashing your arms around in water. To fill the kid’s buckets and throw it at the sun—the way the water falls apart into drops, and then into mist, the way a rainbow appears for a second and is gone.

via Henrik Karlsson