Great Video, currently a Data Engineer and starting to slowly see my job morph into an AI Engineer. Perhaps that will be the case for all Software Engineers as well.
Loved the video Greg. Thank you. Also, genuine question. Is this you, or your video avatar? If it is the latter, it's even more impressive. It's a privilege to listen to your thoughts and ideas, regardless.
I'm currently going to school for my 1st bachelor’s degree in computer science. I want to do this but tbh its a pit stop to becoming a computational astrophysicist.
I agree 100%. Especially with saying that evals and observability are perhaps the most important. Personally, I break down the most important things in an AI project to “the big three”: evals, context, and the expert. If an AI project is missing any of these three, the project will likely fail.
In 2025, there will be many opportunities for people who combine generative AI skills with knowledge-based expertise. In my company (a large pharmaceutical firm), fewer than 1% of employees are interesting in mastering AI.
@@DataIndependent Quick question: do I need to be a developer to become and AI Engineer and follow the guide you shared? I've been using LLM models to code , debug, and Improve the code, and experimented a little with Crew AI and manage to built a shitty working app, i'm happy it worked but I can't judge how clean and good the code is hence my question, or should I just keep doing what I'm doing and keep learning programming down the road. P.S. I'm very serious about becoming an AI Engineer in 2025 and land my 1st client. I have 15 years of experience in sales and business development and I want to specialize in building AI Sales tools and solutions. Sorry this got long 😅
Hello there, I build web scraping bots using python. Now I am looking forward to build AI driven web scrapers... I want to scrap and sell datasets from famous e-commerce websites. Do you think this idea is good for me ?
Excellent video, Greg. Now, what about if we've already spent tons of time learning this stuff, have built public projects that highlight our skills, and are still having trouble getting hired? Where is the deluge of jobs I'm hearing about?
To help there I'd want to break down your job application funnel What do your metrics look like? I made this video a long time ago which talks about the stages. If you can share metrics for each stage I can help you debug the problem ruclips.net/video/3BRLGRqj8ps/видео.html
So much value here, thanks Greg
Hey Greg,
What an amazing video!
About the full doc, I don't even know what to say!
Ah, something I know; thank you so much :)
Great Video, currently a Data Engineer and starting to slowly see my job morph into an AI Engineer. Perhaps that will be the case for all Software Engineers as well.
I saw your early videos back in the GPT3.5 & GPT4 days about langchain. Really cool to see you on the OpenAI video.
Loved the video Greg. Thank you.
Also, genuine question. Is this you, or your video avatar? If it is the latter, it's even more impressive.
It's a privilege to listen to your thoughts and ideas, regardless.
I'm currently going to school for my 1st bachelor’s degree in computer science. I want to do this but tbh its a pit stop to becoming a computational astrophysicist.
Great content as aways!
I agree 100%. Especially with saying that evals and observability are perhaps the most important.
Personally, I break down the most important things in an AI project to “the big three”: evals, context, and the expert. If an AI project is missing any of these three, the project will likely fail.
Thanks Greg!
Mr. Greg... saw you in the room with Sam A.
Love seeing you in those circles.
Good work
Thank you!
In 2025, there will be many opportunities for people who combine generative AI skills with knowledge-based expertise. In my company (a large pharmaceutical firm), fewer than 1% of employees are interesting in mastering AI.
Incredible video, thank you for the guide it helps a lot
I really love your channel . Very rich and practical content
Thank you for a Great Job
Nice!! Thank you
@@DataIndependent Quick question: do I need to be a developer to become and AI Engineer and follow the guide you shared? I've been using LLM models to code , debug, and Improve the code, and experimented a little with Crew AI and manage to built a shitty working app, i'm happy it worked but I can't judge how clean and good the code is hence my question, or should I just keep doing what I'm doing and keep learning programming down the road.
P.S. I'm very serious about becoming an AI Engineer in 2025 and land my 1st client. I have 15 years of experience in sales and business development and I want to specialize in building AI Sales tools and solutions.
Sorry this got long 😅
oh shit, when i saw that open ai video i thought that face seems familiar, i am so bad with names
Not just Great Video, it helps a lot. Thanks You so, Much
Heck ya!
So what you are talking about is not really AI in general but LLM's
Hello there, I build web scraping bots using python. Now I am looking forward to build AI driven web scrapers... I want to scrap and sell datasets from famous e-commerce websites. Do you think this idea is good for me ?
Find a buyer first
If you can find one, and delivery value to them, then it’s a good idea
very helpful!
Excellent video, Greg. Now, what about if we've already spent tons of time learning this stuff, have built public projects that highlight our skills, and are still having trouble getting hired? Where is the deluge of jobs I'm hearing about?
To help there I'd want to break down your job application funnel
What do your metrics look like? I made this video a long time ago which talks about the stages. If you can share metrics for each stage I can help you debug the problem
ruclips.net/video/3BRLGRqj8ps/видео.html
@@DataIndependent I'll give this a look. There is no doubt finding a fit is difficult. Thanks, man.
👏
People learn your fundamentals, stay in the loop with what's current but don't let grifters pull you into made up disciplines
Do you disagree with any of these buckets? If so I’m curious which ones
Invaluable guide and likely to help a ton of budding engineers make life changing career moves. Big ups, Greg! 🫡