'Deep Learning' online course now available

MathWorks Australia

Friday, 17 July, 2020

'Deep Learning' online course now available

MathWorks has partnered with NVIDIA’s Deep Learning Institute and is now offering a ‘Deep Learning with MATLAB’ course.

The two-day course is being offered in both instructor-led online and self-paced on-demand formats throughout the rest of 2020.

On completion, engineers, scientists and researchers will be ready to apply GPU-accelerated deep learning techniques in MATLAB to common applications such as image classification, autonomous systems, voice recognition and object detection. For dates and locations, visit the Deep Learning with MATLAB course schedule.

MathWorks provides a comprehensive platform for building AI-driven systems that is based on decades of supporting complex engineering projects. GPU Coder generates optimised CUDA code from MATLAB code for deep learning, embedded vision and autonomous systems, which allows developers to build solutions that run efficiently on NVIDIA GPUs. In addition, a MATLAB container from NVIDIA GPU Cloud (NGC), a hub for GPU-optimised AI and HPC software, provides a complete deep learning workflow that uses NVIDIA GPUs to accelerate neural network training to scale up performance across nodes.

“The NVIDIA Deep Learning Institute plays a crucial role in developing hands-on training and showcasing how to use new techniques like deep learning to solve complex problems,” said David Rich, Director, MATLAB Marketing, MathWorks.

“This course offers a practical approach to deep learning that will help NVIDIA users to iterate quickly and converge on a solution that meets product and time-to-market requirements.”

“There’s been a surge of interest in the Deep Learning with MATLAB course using NVIDIA GPUs,” said Will Ramey, Senior Director and Global Head of Developer Programs at NVIDIA.

“Learning how to quickly and easily apply the power of NVIDIA GPUs to accelerate neural network training streamlines the process of application development and allows for more rapid deployment and faster time to market.”

Image credit: ©stock.adobe.com/au/Dubo

Related News

Reading teaches children about pain: study

Young children learn about the concept of pain through reading, a new study from University of...

Increasing language diversity in western Sydney schools

Nearly 250 language backgrounds are represented in NSW public schools, according to a new report.

Lack of school readiness predicts disadvantage: study

An analysis of student data has found that students struggling when they first start school are...


  • All content Copyright © 2024 Westwick-Farrow Pty Ltd