-Google AI for Anyone -Harvards Introduction to Artificial Intelligence with Python on EdX -IBM Foundations for Everyone Specialization-Coursera -Intel Edge AI-Intel AI academy -Jetson AI Courses on Nvidia-Nvidia Deep Learning Institute -Elements of AI by University of Helsinki -Introduction to Generative AI by Google Cloud
I already have a job and not looking for an AI career but plan on taking one of these courses for fun; this stuff is applicable _(directly or peripherally)_ across all industries. GREAT VIDEO THANKS.
I'm an internal corporate tech recruiter with 17+ years of experience who's worked for some of the largest tech companies in the world, and most jobs with an "Engineer" title require a degree in Computer Sciene, Electrical Engineering or other highly technical areas of study. That being said, certifications are huge and can be a differentiator or give you an edge over other candidates. BIG TECH companies like Google, Meta, or Amazon will not hire you for engineering roles without a degree. There are exceptions, but rare. Great video and good luck out there. It's a tough job market.
What do you think about aeronautical engineers? I’m still in school. My background is in aviation, so I naturally want to get a degree that complements my background, but I’m really more interested in tech world. Should I change majors now while it’s still early to electrical engineering or should I stick with aeronautical engineering? Just looking for off the top of your head opinion…
The world has turned upside down. No degree will suffice for what's coming. Get certifications. Get a degree in EE or CS. They will become worthless quickly, but at least you have one. Good luck
@@MikeMikeMiker I agree with most of what you say with the caveat that I 've been out of the marketplace for many years. My N of 1 experience is that I have/had a degree in Zoology but got tired of menial jobs with only a BS degree. I got a bunch of certifications in Microsoft and was hired into the valley at HP then leveraged it up into management with various companies. If you haven't got 4-6 years to get a CS degree, cert up and learn how to give good interviews. Thanks for posting the reality for most people, though. A CS degree is a replacement for hustle. I like your "no degree will suffice for what's coming". I agree.
As of today, the Harvard course costs $299 to upgrade to the certificate program, but they're giving a $90 discount code when you create your edX account.
I was skeptical of this video being clickbait from the title but the information is valuable. I have 20 years of SWE experience and am looking to add AI to my skillset in 2025. The Intel course looks like the best option for me.
Super informative! I'm a Product Manager working with chatbots. I've been looking to get more AI-ready, but I'm not a programmer (and no interest in becoming one).
I am just curious: did you watch your video yourself? Do you even notice how quickly you scroll through the course titles, to the point that it's actually impossible to catch them? And then you don't list out the courses or provide the links to them in the description either!
The big question is how updated are these courses? The tech world is changing so rapidly that anything from a couple months ago is completely out of date basically.
@superhumanlife Great content. Thank you. You mentioned AI job salaries, and honestly, they seem pretty low. Regular full-stack developers are making similar amounts-around $100k a year-which has been the standard for about a decade. But when you factor in inflation, these salaries should be way higher, especially given how much money is being poured into AI right now. Am I missing something here?
Haven't watched it yet...but if she's saying they are all around 100k, that's not "incredibly well" (at least in the US) even in the Midwest, especially if you are already coming from dev.
Thank you for this video. But I can not find the Intel's Edge AI Training Course nowhere... It connects me to Udacity (which is very expensice in compared with Udemy and Coursera) and the trainings there do not have Intel Brand. Could you please assist me in this ?
Interesting video but the fast paced delivery the timer in the top corner, maybe the background music all contributed to raising my stress levels. I think I need to lie down now.
I've been looking into the Jetson course. Not sure where to start. Writing after spending loads of time browsing around their website. Can you give a link to courses? Thanks
The scary part about tech is that AI could take over your job in a matter of months. Things are moving exponentially quicker so what you think is a good skill to have could be displaced before you know it by AI.
The stort answer is no. If anyone can do it, it's not very valuable. Anyone can sit through courses. Your ability to make money depends on the useful skills gained from them. How much we immerse ourselves, and solve real works problems outside of those courses is what creates value, for which employers are willing to pay.
Great video but it would be great to have chapter links to be able to go back to specific certifications! 🤔🙄😊 Also would be great if there where links to the Certifications!
I copied the transcript from the video and asked ChatGPT to make a list of all the certifications called out with a brief description of each: Google AI for Anyone A beginner-friendly course designed to introduce non-technical individuals to AI and machine learning. It covers fundamental AI concepts and real-world applications without requiring coding knowledge. Cost: Free, but certification costs $99. Duration: 5-6 weeks, self-paced. Harvard’s Introduction to Artificial Intelligence with Python A more advanced course focused on applying AI algorithms through hands-on projects using Python and libraries like TensorFlow or PyTorch. It covers technical details without requiring deep coding expertise. Cost: Free, but certification costs $199. Duration: 7 weeks, 10-12 hours per week. IBM AI Foundations for Everyone This course is aimed at individuals from various fields (e.g., marketing, HR, education) who want to learn how AI applies to their industry. It covers machine learning and neural networks without requiring programming skills. Cost: Free, but certification costs $39/month through Coursera. Duration: 3-4 months, 3 hours per week. Intel Edge AI Certification Focuses on Edge AI, which brings AI intelligence directly to devices like smart cameras, wearables, and IoT gadgets. The course provides hands-on experience with Intel’s AI tools for developing AI solutions. Cost: Free, with optional paid advanced modules. Duration: 6-8 weeks, self-paced. Nvidia Deep Learning Institute (DLI) Courses Practical, hands-on training for AI at the edge, such as developing AI systems for drones, robots, and self-driving cars. Nvidia’s tools and resources are used to help learners develop and deploy AI projects. Cost: $90-$150 per course, depending on the modules. Duration: 4-6 weeks. Elements of AI by University of Helsinki A crash course for understanding AI’s role in everyday life. It provides a broad overview of AI without requiring technical or coding skills, making it suitable for people in non-technical roles. Cost: Free. Duration: 30 hours, self-paced. Google Cloud's Introduction to Generative AI A course focused on generative AI, where learners gain hands-on experience with tools like Google Cloud AI APIs to build models that can generate images, text, or music. It provides practical applications of generative AI across industries. Cost: Free, with certification available via Coursera’s subscription model. Duration: 4 weeks, 4-6 hours per week. These certifications offer a wide range of options for beginners and professionals looking to enhance their AI knowledge and skills across various industries.
Great topic. Absence of links to courses is a bummer. Hard to know which course you mean as there ae so many up on their website. Also, you should talk about who this course is for,. Your content seems to assume that anyone can pivot to a job without any background in it with a 4-6 week course.
Google AI opens up Coursera and they want at least $50/month. I guess these are no longer free? I’m not clicking on a certificate option, by the way there’s no way to get around paying $50/month.
Im using ai to calculate job found a job that pay a lot hourly then salary ai said hourly will make more then salary because once the law pass for no tax in overtime people hourly will make them salary
why do you use a thumbnail image of a look of total shock? this video is not a shocking video, it's just some general information. and how in the hell do you know what people are getting paid?
no, but they start conversations that otherwise wouldn't have been started. Certifications aren't everything but nobody forgets to list one on their resume.
With this mindset you will not get a job for sure. My sister took one course in data analytics (power bi) and got hired and working there for years now. No previous experience. 😊
....energy consumption from Google and Microsoft is skyrocketing due to AI server demands. This planet is going to catch on fire while we fck around with this technology.
Certifications and education are a screening criteria, you can't get the door open in some cases to expose your acumen if you can't get passed a screening
Yes and no. Certificates are helpful as it shows your knowledge and dedication to learning. I'm not saying if you get your CCNA, you're suddenly know everything about networking, but it's something that endorses your experience.
It depends who pays for the certs. Years ago, what I did was get part-time and internship and ask my employer to pay for the first small certs. For the hard work and dedication, I received an additional scholarship and grant. I received performance awards and medals. Eversince, I had employers, other companies, and governments to sponsor my certs in line with the jobs I do. I have 24 certs now and i am able to find employment across multiple industries with very decent wages.
💸If you enjoyed the video, grab our new eBook: 200 Validated Remote Job Sites with more than 200'000 jobs: bit.ly/35rq2YA
This is by FAR THE BEST VIDEO I've Watched about Guiding Us in the Right Direction into the World of AI and Career Development. Thank You!!!!!
I've learned SO MUCH from just this ONE Video!!
thanks
-Google AI for Anyone
-Harvards Introduction to Artificial Intelligence with Python on EdX
-IBM Foundations for Everyone Specialization-Coursera
-Intel Edge AI-Intel AI academy
-Jetson AI Courses on Nvidia-Nvidia Deep Learning Institute
-Elements of AI by University of Helsinki
-Introduction to Generative AI by Google Cloud
Well done, thanks!
Thanks!
Thanks
Thanks for the list @nevamind1027
Thanks
I already have a job and not looking for an AI career but plan on taking one of these courses for fun; this stuff is applicable _(directly or peripherally)_ across all industries. GREAT VIDEO THANKS.
I'll wait until the movie comes out.
I'm an internal corporate tech recruiter with 17+ years of experience who's worked for some of the largest tech companies in the world, and most jobs with an "Engineer" title require a degree in Computer Sciene, Electrical Engineering or other highly technical areas of study. That being said, certifications are huge and can be a differentiator or give you an edge over other candidates. BIG TECH companies like Google, Meta, or Amazon will not hire you for engineering roles without a degree. There are exceptions, but rare. Great video and good luck out there. It's a tough job market.
I really appreciate your experience analysis.
How one should approach job market to get hired in the AI era?
@rizwanqadeer2412 get a standard degree and go into debt
What do you think about aeronautical engineers? I’m still in school. My background is in aviation, so I naturally want to get a degree that complements my background, but I’m really more interested in tech world. Should I change majors now while it’s still early to electrical engineering or should I stick with aeronautical engineering? Just looking for off the top of your head opinion…
The world has turned upside down. No degree will suffice for what's coming. Get certifications. Get a degree in EE or CS. They will become worthless quickly, but at least you have one. Good luck
@@MikeMikeMiker I agree with most of what you say with the caveat that I 've been out of the marketplace for many years. My N of 1 experience is that I have/had a degree in Zoology but got tired of menial jobs with only a BS degree. I got a bunch of certifications in Microsoft and was hired into the valley at HP then leveraged it up into management with various companies. If you haven't got 4-6 years to get a CS degree, cert up and learn how to give good interviews. Thanks for posting the reality for most people, though. A CS degree is a replacement for hustle. I like your "no degree will suffice for what's coming". I agree.
As of today, the Harvard course costs $299 to upgrade to the certificate program, but they're giving a $90 discount code when you create your edX account.
A lot of great information. Thanks for sharing. I am impressed with your style and the data provided.
This was the most informative and helpful A.I ROADMAP video i have ever seen online. Thanks
I was looking for exactly video like that for days now! And you explained everything in one! Thank youuuuu!!!
Im starting my AI journey and this has been incredibly helpful! Thank you for all these great resources.
I was skeptical of this video being clickbait from the title but the information is valuable. I have 20 years of SWE experience and am looking to add AI to my skillset in 2025. The Intel course looks like the best option for me.
great video ;only suggestion is to leave the name of each product / course on the screen while you discuss it -- awesome job
Super informative! I'm a Product Manager working with chatbots. I've been looking to get more AI-ready, but I'm not a programmer (and no interest in becoming one).
One of the best content on UA-cam
Very Helpful information for someone just starting to look into this field. Thank you
The end with the Robot sync was just mad 👍🏻🔥
its doable! Thank you!
Thank you for such a great video! Enrolling in one of the courses immediately.
Very well presented, liked & subscribed solely based on this video 😀I will now go and try a couple of these courses and will report back soon 👌
Thx. for the great video and for the timestamps in that.
Thank you for sharing.
Wow wonderful, I am so amazed.
I don’t think you need music in the background. Good review!
I am just curious: did you watch your video yourself? Do you even notice how quickly you scroll through the course titles, to the point that it's actually impossible to catch them? And then you don't list out the courses or provide the links to them in the description either!
This is very details and very helpful. Thank you.
Thank you so much for sharing
Thank you for this type of content. I have no knowledge of coding or IT background but your video gave me a hope In AI field.
What course are you going to take I’m in the same boat
@@Pblock623 what do you have in mind?
Amazing thanks a lot
It’s a great a video, but would be better with certification title in video and chapters
This vid is so informative!! I already enrolled in the free Python course. Thank you!!
One of the first AI videos that’s actually filled with “meat”. Thank you.
The big question is how updated are these courses? The tech world is changing so rapidly that anything from a couple months ago is completely out of date basically.
@superhumanlife
Great content. Thank you.
You mentioned AI job salaries, and honestly, they seem pretty low. Regular full-stack developers are making similar amounts-around $100k a year-which has been the standard for about a decade. But when you factor in inflation, these salaries should be way higher, especially given how much money is being poured into AI right now. Am I missing something here?
Haven't watched it yet...but if she's saying they are all around 100k, that's not "incredibly well" (at least in the US) even in the Midwest, especially if you are already coming from dev.
so nice video. thanks for giving so much information and inspiration.
thanks! great content
Thanks for the overview.
Why give so many links in your description but none are the links mentioned in this video?
true
Why complain when you could just look it up?
Thank you for this video. But I can not find the Intel's Edge AI Training Course nowhere... It connects me to Udacity (which is very expensice in compared with Udemy and Coursera) and the trainings there do not have Intel Brand. Could you please assist me in this ?
Thank you, truly appreciate it
For all these courses which is the best laptop one should get ?
You are amazing! Thank you!
You're welcome. Glad you like it.
Interesting video but the fast paced delivery the timer in the top corner, maybe the background music all contributed to raising my stress levels. I think I need to lie down now.
Thank you!
Why so many links in description that has nothing to do with your post?
I've been looking into the Jetson course. Not sure where to start. Writing after spending loads of time browsing around their website. Can you give a link to courses? Thanks
Ibreally thank you for this video!
You're welcome.
Iam about to start my ai journey what would you suggest I would start at
Great work
Thanks for the video. Can you make video about Data Annotation course and Certifications please?
Thank you! ❤ xo
Thank you! 😊
You're welcome. 😊
What r the requirements for AI specialist? Sought after at linkin
The scary part about tech is that AI could take over your job in a matter of months. Things are moving exponentially quicker so what you think is a good skill to have could be displaced before you know it by AI.
I love successful ladies 🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤
Thanks!
Very good video
What is the additional education you mean ? Can I get a job only taking these courses?
No she says it’s good to see on your resume
The stort answer is no. If anyone can do it, it's not very valuable. Anyone can sit through courses. Your ability to make money depends on the useful skills gained from them. How much we immerse ourselves, and solve real works problems outside of those courses is what creates value, for which employers are willing to pay.
@@coriding that’s why there should be a course that has a typical problem to solve that you can just slap a companies brand or color on it
Has anyone been able to locate the Intel AI Edge course that was referenced in this video? If so, please share the link to same. Thanks.
Great video but it would be great to have chapter links to be able to go back to specific certifications! 🤔🙄😊
Also would be great if there where links to the Certifications!
I copied the transcript from the video and asked ChatGPT to make a list of all the certifications called out with a brief description of each:
Google AI for Anyone
A beginner-friendly course designed to introduce non-technical individuals to AI and machine learning. It covers fundamental AI concepts and real-world applications without requiring coding knowledge.
Cost: Free, but certification costs $99.
Duration: 5-6 weeks, self-paced.
Harvard’s Introduction to Artificial Intelligence with Python
A more advanced course focused on applying AI algorithms through hands-on projects using Python and libraries like TensorFlow or PyTorch. It covers technical details without requiring deep coding expertise.
Cost: Free, but certification costs $199.
Duration: 7 weeks, 10-12 hours per week.
IBM AI Foundations for Everyone
This course is aimed at individuals from various fields (e.g., marketing, HR, education) who want to learn how AI applies to their industry. It covers machine learning and neural networks without requiring programming skills.
Cost: Free, but certification costs $39/month through Coursera.
Duration: 3-4 months, 3 hours per week.
Intel Edge AI Certification
Focuses on Edge AI, which brings AI intelligence directly to devices like smart cameras, wearables, and IoT gadgets. The course provides hands-on experience with Intel’s AI tools for developing AI solutions.
Cost: Free, with optional paid advanced modules.
Duration: 6-8 weeks, self-paced.
Nvidia Deep Learning Institute (DLI) Courses
Practical, hands-on training for AI at the edge, such as developing AI systems for drones, robots, and self-driving cars. Nvidia’s tools and resources are used to help learners develop and deploy AI projects.
Cost: $90-$150 per course, depending on the modules.
Duration: 4-6 weeks.
Elements of AI by University of Helsinki
A crash course for understanding AI’s role in everyday life. It provides a broad overview of AI without requiring technical or coding skills, making it suitable for people in non-technical roles.
Cost: Free.
Duration: 30 hours, self-paced.
Google Cloud's Introduction to Generative AI
A course focused on generative AI, where learners gain hands-on experience with tools like Google Cloud AI APIs to build models that can generate images, text, or music. It provides practical applications of generative AI across industries.
Cost: Free, with certification available via Coursera’s subscription model.
Duration: 4 weeks, 4-6 hours per week.
These certifications offer a wide range of options for beginners and professionals looking to enhance their AI knowledge and skills across various industries.
or you could not be lazy and simply use google
Be grateful that this is even available
Use those thumbs buddy. We believe in you.
@@MyEmoDiaries they aren't lazy and are doing a research and the video didn't provide enough you F00L
Great topic. Absence of links to courses is a bummer. Hard to know which course you mean as there ae so many up on their website. Also, you should talk about who this course is for,. Your content seems to assume that anyone can pivot to a job without any background in it with a 4-6 week course.
Just need to learn with the Amazon Nova suite
For Non-Technical person, which one is good to have and getting the job right after completion the course?
SWEET INFOMAAM
The background song, though. Kinda hard to listen to it until the end
IBM course is only free for 7 days trial
and NVIDIA course is paid
Your videos are good but correct India's Map please which you have shown.
So i have a marketing degree but dont have much professional experience. Would getting a certification in any of these be enough to get a job?
Google AI opens up Coursera and they want at least $50/month. I guess these are no longer free? I’m not clicking on a certificate option, by the way there’s no way to get around paying $50/month.
What about Salesforce AI Specialist?
In what order would you recommend taking these courses?
Im using ai to calculate job found a job that pay a lot hourly then salary ai said hourly will make more then salary because once the law pass for no tax in overtime people hourly will make them salary
what about industrygradai courses? I saw that their website offer industry specific ai training.Can you please elaborate on that
howd she talk about IBM but not actually talk aboht it
So wait, if I take the course on Coursera and get certified, I lose my certification if I stop my Coursera subscription?
How many certifications do you know of that would require an ongoing subscription? That doesn't make any sense. Come on now, where's the logic?🙄
You should check with them.
CHAPTERS: When you scroll over the time or if you are on mobile. Click on the description next to the time and it pulls up the chapters.
Looks like the price for Google AI for Everyone certificate went up to $299 …. 💰 02:40
I THINK YOU MEANT 2025 IN YOUR INTRO-- NOT 2024 BECAUSE THIS VIDEOS IS 2 MONTHS OLD AND WE ARE DAYS AWAY FROM 2025
Is ai course by the university of helsinki for free?
What about the AWS certs?
"Is this what they mean by 'life-changing content'?"
What about Andy Ng course?
Tone down the hyper background music can’t focus your message
Adderal
Im new here on your channel
Haha! If only I can get through these videos with those voices and mannerisms.. 🤔.. it hurts my brain 😂
why do you use a thumbnail image of a look of total shock? this video is not a shocking video, it's just some general information. and how in the hell do you know what people are getting paid?
I hate slack jawed "I'm shocked" thumbnails. I watched this vid in spite of goofy face, but I usually resist clicking.
Nice post. But can you please fix map of India at @6:01 mark, and also don't repeat the same mistake in the future, please? Thanks.
What a whiner - you got something for free - be grateful.
Too much hands gestures it’s kinda distracting
Has anyone tried any course for Ai in finance and/ or business? (Other than Wharton's specialisation - which I found more theoretical than practical)
I'm not the smartest man but I can read and I'm very creative... Can I do this???
Nothing is too hard, you just haven’t learned it yet. You can do it!
Certification alone won't get you the job!
no, but they start conversations that otherwise wouldn't have been started. Certifications aren't everything but nobody forgets to list one on their resume.
And the special medal goes to!
What will get you the job?
With this mindset you will not get a job for sure. My sister took one course in data analytics (power bi) and got hired and working there for years now. No previous experience. 😊
The figure you gave ($15.2 Trillion dollars) isn’t more than China’s GDP.
Why don't you do it then
Google AI for Anyone certificate is now $299.
While these certifications sound great, do you think they're enough to become truly competitive in the AI job market?
This is good very good info but you put wrong map of India, which you need to correct.
....energy consumption from Google and Microsoft is skyrocketing due to AI server demands. This planet is going to catch on fire while we fck around with this technology.
Oh my surprised face made me click this video 😂
Please place the correct map of India in your video 6:01.
The music is horrible distraction
Content creators who think it’s cool to have loud background music
Coursera courses are cheaper and effective
"Certifications" are usually a money-making racket. People will hire you for your ability and knowledge, and not because you have a certificate.
I would disagree
Certifications and education are a screening criteria, you can't get the door open in some cases to expose your acumen if you can't get passed a screening
In that case, so are degrees. They basically serve the same purpose.
Yes and no. Certificates are helpful as it shows your knowledge and dedication to learning. I'm not saying if you get your CCNA, you're suddenly know everything about networking, but it's something that endorses your experience.
It depends who pays for the certs. Years ago, what I did was get part-time and internship and ask my employer to pay for the first small certs. For the hard work and dedication, I received an additional scholarship and grant. I received performance awards and medals. Eversince, I had employers, other companies, and governments to sponsor my certs in line with the jobs I do. I have 24 certs now and i am able to find employment across multiple industries with very decent wages.