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How are you doing today? We’ve got some fresh, hot machine learning right from the source today!
I am deeply enjoying the long Easter weekend here, but I won’t deprive you of your weekly machine learning dose!
it’s been 2 years of this newsletter! 🥳
In these anniversary issues, I like to go through the last year of writing this weekly newsletter and see what everyone liked. So, in case you missed these awesome links, this is what everyone else enjoyed!
what an eventful week. Twitter seems to be dying slowly, and winter has eventually arrived. Let’s warm our hearts with some machine learning!
The Christmas season started! Let’s look at some merry machine learning!
Jesper Dramsch (they/them) works at the intersection of machine learning and physical, real-world data with 8 years of experience.
Currently, they're working as a scientist for machine learning in numerical weather prediction at the coordinated organisation ECMWF.
Jesper is a fellow of the Software Sustainability Institute, creating awareness and educational resources around the reproducibility of machine learning results in applied science. Before, they have worked on applied exploratory machine learning problems, e.g. satellites and Lidar imaging on trains, and defended a PhD in machine learning for geoscience. During the PhD, Jesper wrote multiple publications and often presented at workshops and conferences, eventually holding keynote presentations on the future of machine learning in geoscience.
Moreover, they worked as consultant machine learning and Python educator in international companies and the UK government. They create educational notebooks on Kaggle applying ML to different domains, reaching rank 81 worldwide out of over 100,000 participants and their video courses on Skillshare have been watched over 128 days by over 4500 students. Recently, Jesper was invited into the Youtube Partner programme creating videos around programming, machine learning, and tech.
Jesper Dramsch is the creator of PythonDeadlin.es, ML.recipes, data-science-gui.de and the Latent Space Community.