Do you feel left out when “Artificial Intelligence” or “Big Data” is mentioned in the conversation? Are you itching to learn more about these concepts but struggling to find a point at which to begin? If you’ve answered yes to these questions, then this is the book for you. In it, I will explain AI, its sub-discipline machine learning, and Big Data in a clear, easy-to-understand way. Not only will you be able to understand the big ideas of AI and Big Data, but you’ll also be able to hold your own in a conversation!Join me as we peruse through the mighty highs and sad lows of AI history, machine learning, and Big Data so that you can understand how the world is being changed gradually with the use of these systems. Integrating and using these systems in our daily lives has long been thought to revolutionize the way that we do things. But, what if the way that AI makes us do things is unethical? Not only will we explore what these systems are and can do, but we will also venture into the ethical implications that arise with the use of AI and Big Data. If you’re new to AI and Big Data, read on to find out why Big Data and AI already know a lot more about you than you do about them.
This book isn’t worth a lot. I don’t know when it was published but a lot of the content is out of date especially when it comes to its applications. The applications for Big data, AI, ML are completely dumbed down and anticlimactic, there many more interesting and valuable applications than the ones in the book. Also the history of each discipline in the book is just a bunch of sub headings thrown together about different creations within each sub-discipline through the years without providing a greater narrative (I know it’s a short book but still considered this shoddy work). There are also a lot of typos and bad grammar within. He also plays down the possibility of AI getting out of hand and machine overlords/ robots taking over the human race which I consider a very realistic possibility if this field is left unregulated and unchecked. He actually says this isn’t a possibility. Very disappointed in the book