CourseVerdict

Advanced Computer Vision with TensorFlow vs Python for Data Science and Machine Learning Bootcamp

Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.

DeepLearning.AI (Coursera) · AI & ML Courses

Advanced Computer Vision with TensorFlow

4.1/ 5 · 43 opinions
30 positive9 neutral4 negative/ 43 total

Udemy · AI & ML Courses

Python for Data Science and Machine Learning Bootcamp

4.3/ 5 · 62 opinions
48 positive9 neutral5 negative/ 62 total

Per-criterion

Content quality4.5 / 5

The course covers four weeks of genuinely advanced material: transfer learning applied to object detection in Week 1; full object detection pipelines including R-CNN, Fast R-CNN, and the TensorFlow Object Detection API with ResNet-50 in Week 2; semantic and instance segmentation with FCN, U-Net, and Mask R-CNN in Week 3; and model interpretability through class activation maps, saliency maps, and GradCAM in Week 4. The Week 4 content on visualising what a model attends to is consistently cited in reviews as uniquely valuable — Mario Filho's Forecastegy analysis describes the interpretability section as "a treasure that you won't find in many similar courses." The main content gap is theoretical depth: the course teaches how to use these architectures in TensorFlow without deriving why they work mathematically, and the TF Object Detection API used in Week 2 is showing maintenance strain as of 2025, with some learners noting deprecated dependencies and install friction.

Instructor4.6 / 5

Laurence Moroney, Google's former AI Advocacy lead and author of "AI and ML for Coders" (O'Reilly), leads the course alongside Eddy Shyu, Product Lead at DeepLearning.AI. Reviewers across Coursera and independent blogs consistently describe Moroney as one of the clearest AI educators on any MOOC platform — he codes live, makes deliberate mistakes that model real debugging behaviour, and uses intuition-first explanations before introducing API calls. Steven Kolawole's Medium review describes the course as expanding his computer vision "frontiers" with clear teaching throughout. Eddy Shyu receives fewer individual mentions but is generally described as complementary. No significant criticism of either instructor's delivery appears in the corpus — complaints are about scope, labs, and tooling, not pedagogy.

Value for money3.9 / 5

At $49/month on Coursera, a motivated learner who completes the four weeks in one billing cycle pays roughly $49-100 total, depending on pace. The course is the third in a four-course specialisation; a learner who purchases only this course can audit for free or subscribe for graded assignments. The content-to-price ratio is strong for what is covered — R-CNN, U-Net, Mask R-CNN, and GradCAM in a single focused course represents genuine depth. The caveat is that the course is not accessible in isolation: it formally requires the TensorFlow Developer Professional Certificate and the first two courses of the Advanced Techniques Specialisation as prerequisites, meaning realistic total investment across the stack is substantially more than a single month's subscription.

Support3.2 / 5

The Google Colab-based lab environment is praised for removing GPU setup friction, but the stated time estimates for assignments are systematically too low. Steven Kolawole notes the Week 2 object detection lab (described as 1 hour) took him five hours to complete. Dima Bykhovsky's personal review flags that creating a working local Conda environment requires significant adjustments beyond what the instructions provide. The TF Object Detection API dependency in Week 2 has accumulated maintenance issues — newer learners in 2024-2025 report install errors that are not addressed in the course materials. The DeepLearning.AI community forum provides workarounds from other learners, but official course updates have not kept pace with TensorFlow ecosystem changes.

Real-world use4.0 / 5

Object detection, image segmentation, and model interpretability are genuinely in-demand computer vision skills in 2026 — autonomous systems, medical imaging, retail analytics, and satellite image analysis all rely on the specific architectures covered. The course builds working familiarity with Mask R-CNN and U-Net, both of which appear in production ML pipelines. The applicability ceiling is the TF Object Detection API layer, which abstracts much of the implementation detail and is increasingly outdated as the ecosystem evolves. Learners who want to work with detection systems in PyTorch or Ultralytics YOLOv8 — the dominant production tools in 2026 — will find a meaningful gap between what the course teaches and the codebase they will work in. The interpretability content (GradCAM, saliency maps) transfers directly regardless of framework.

Value4.1 / 5

Among DeepLearning.AI's TensorFlow offerings, this is the most content-dense course relative to its subscription cost — four weeks covering architecture families that take many practitioners months of blog-reading to assemble into a coherent mental model. Azzam Radman's Coursera review, calling it the "richest course I have ever taken on Coursera amongst the 19 courses I already finished," captures the upper end of learner sentiment. The value floor is set by the prerequisite investment: a learner cannot access this course without first completing several predecessor courses, making the effective entry cost considerably higher for someone starting from scratch.

Practical projects3.8 / 5

Each week ends with a graded programming assignment that requires implementing or extending a real architecture — building a U-Net from scratch, configuring the TF Object Detection API for a custom dataset (the Zombie Detection lab), generating GradCAM heatmaps. The assignments are more genuinely challenging than those in the predecessor courses: Neelay Doshi's Coursera review describes them as "quite thorough and challenging," and Ernest Warzocha notes the course is "significantly more difficult than previously." The limitation flagged most consistently is the "follow the code" structure — Adriano's 3-star Coursera review puts it plainly: "The labs are basically a follow the code, with no great code challenge." The gap between stated time estimates and actual completion time is also a consistent friction point.

Career impact3.9 / 5

Object detection and image segmentation skills are actively sought in computer vision engineering roles across robotics, healthcare, and retail. The course provides vocabulary, conceptual grounding, and a completion certificate suitable for a LinkedIn profile or CV. The career ceiling is the framework question: PyTorch and Ultralytics dominate production computer vision pipelines in 2026, and learners who finish this TensorFlow-specific course will need to translate their architectural understanding to a different ecosystem for most industry positions. The architecture knowledge (R-CNN family, U-Net variants, GradCAM) is framework-agnostic and transfers — the implementation patterns are not.

Project quality4.0 / 5

The end-to-end projects in this course — training a segmentation model with U-Net, running inference with Mask R-CNN, generating class activation maps — touch on tasks that appear in real ML engineering work. The instructional design is solid: Moroney and Shyu explain each component's function before the notebook exercises it, and the GradCAM lab in Week 4 produces visual outputs (heatmaps overlaid on the input image) that give learners immediate intuition for model behaviour. The limitation is GPU time and dataset scale: assignments run on small, pre-configured datasets that do not expose learners to the data pipeline engineering that dominates real production CV projects.

Content quality4.3 / 5

At 25 hours the course covers Python fundamentals, NumPy, Pandas, Matplotlib, Seaborn, Plotly, Cufflinks, Scikit-Learn, and a closing primer on TensorFlow and Spark. Reviewers consistently call it comprehensive and well-paced for a beginner audience, praising the Jupyter notebooks that accompany every lecture. The recurring criticism is that the machine-learning section trades mathematical depth for breadth — algorithms are shown using Scikit-Learn templates, but the "why" behind model choices is explained only lightly. The deep-learning and Spark sections draw specific complaints about being outdated, with one reviewer noting a "sudden jump to older version of TF towards the end." For a broad, practical introduction, the content is generous; for rigorous theory, learners will need a companion resource.

Instructor4.5 / 5

Jose Portilla holds a BS and MS in Mechanical Engineering from Santa Clara University and has trained data science and Python teams at General Electric, Cigna, Credit Suisse, McKinsey, and Starbucks. Across all reviewed sources his teaching style is the most praised element: reviewers describe him as clear, well organised, and able to make intimidating topics feel approachable. Named student comments on CourseDuck include "very good in explaining" and "brings you to the next level." A career-changer on a forum noted the course "gives you an intuitive sense of the models commonly used in ML," crediting Portilla specifically. The only recurring complaint is that later sections receive less polish than the Python and Pandas core.

Value for money4.6 / 5

This is a one-time Udemy purchase that routinely sells at deep discount — commonly cited as under $15. With 25 hours of HD video, full Jupyter notebook access, and lifetime updates, reviewers repeatedly describe it as the best money they spent. One forum user wrote "best money I spent was taking this inexpensive class." With over 400,000 students enrolled and a 4.6 average from ~158,880 ratings, the social proof for the value proposition is unusually strong for a paid course. The comparison to multi-thousand-dollar in-person bootcamps is a recurring framing in positive reviews.

Support3.7 / 5

There is no live mentorship, graded project feedback, or cohort structure. The Udemy Q&A section is the main support channel, and reviewers report it as active enough to get basic questions answered. However, compared to structured programmes with teaching assistants or mentor calls, self-directed learners who get stuck on harder concepts are largely on their own. No dedicated community forum or office hours are offered. The support score reflects this limitation relative to other programme types, not a failing of the course by its own standards as a self-paced lecture series.

Real-world use4.0 / 5

The course builds genuine, hands-on familiarity with the Python data-science stack — NumPy, Pandas, and Scikit-Learn — that is directly transferable to day-to-day analyst and data science work. Portfolio-ready projects on real datasets are a repeated positive. Career-changers on forums credit it as a pivotal step toward entering the field. The ceiling is that it is an on-ramp rather than a finishing course: it does not cover model deployment, production pipelines, experiment tracking, or the broader software engineering context around data science. Reviewers are consistent that substantial follow-on practice and deeper study are needed before tackling meaningful real-world projects independently.

Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.