Machine Learning Specialization vs MIT 6.S191 Introduction to Deep Learning
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
Machine Learning Specialization
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (introtodeeplearning.com) · AI & ML Courses
MIT 6.S191 Introduction to Deep Learning
Per-criterion
Reviewers consistently praise the breadth of the curriculum — supervised learning, neural networks via TensorFlow, decision trees, unsupervised learning and a first look at reinforcement learning — all within 95 hours. The main critique is insufficient depth in certain areas: one reviewer noted the course "doesn't go into a lot of detail on some things" and another flagged that it "skipped over essential libraries like Scikit-Learn preprocessing and Pandas." The reinforcement learning module is widely described as an overview rather than a deep treatment.
Andrew Ng receives near-universal praise across every source. Hacker News commenter rg111 called him "among the best teachers I have ever seen" and farzatv declared it "one of the best courses on ML." The Forecastegy review echoes this: "Andrew Ng's teaching style is both intuitive and engaging." Critical comments about Andrew Ng's delivery are essentially absent in the data collected.
At $49/month Coursera subscription, learners who complete the specialization in two to three months pay roughly $98–$147 for content that carries strong brand recognition. Free audit is available for lectures only. The Interview Guys review calculated this as "one of the best returns in professional development" given ML engineer salary data. The subscription model is criticised by learners who take longer than expected.
Browser-hosted Jupyter notebooks with no local install are praised by multiple reviewers, including Valentyn Druzhynin who highlighted "no installation required" as a key comfort factor. The getbridged.co review noted that mentors on forums provide "thoughtful replies." However, several reviewers flagged that auto-grader unit tests "can be frustrating" and one commenter (BeetleB on HN) found assignments trivially scaffolded.
The course deliberately teaches industry tools — NumPy, scikit-learn, TensorFlow — and multiple reviewers credit it with building a genuine foundation. However, the Neural GPT reviewer on Medium pointed out missing Pandas and sklearn preprocessing coverage, and The Interview Guys stress that "this certification will not make you a machine learning engineer" without supplementary portfolio projects. Datasets in the course are clean and structured, far from real-world messiness.
Reviewers consistently praise that the curriculum is refreshed annually and reaches modern topics — Transformers, generative modeling, LLMs, AI for science — that older courses do not cover. The honest catch is that depth is sacrificed for breadth in eight lectures.
Alexander Amini is described as clear, energetic and good at building intuition from first principles. The recurring caveat is the rotating-lecturer format — multiple reviewers wish Amini taught every lecture rather than alternating with guests and co-instructors.
Completely free — lectures on YouTube, slides on introtodeeplearning.com, labs on GitHub, runnable in free Google Colab. No paywall on any core material. The optional MIT Professional Certificate is not the path most reviewers take.
There is no official forum for online learners. Reviewers credit the GitHub issue tracker as the de facto Q&A channel, but multiple 2024-2025 issues report unresolved bugs in the PyTorch Sequential labs and outdated Colab dependencies.
Three Colab labs (music generation, vision, LLMs) are short but hands-on in both TensorFlow and PyTorch. Reviewers note this is a foundation, not a job-ready portfolio — you finish with intuition and small projects, not a deployed model.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.