DeepLearning.AI TensorFlow Developer Professional Certificate vs Machine Learning Engineer Nanodegree
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Coursera · AI & ML Courses
DeepLearning.AI TensorFlow Developer Professional Certificate
Udacity · AI & ML Courses
Machine Learning Engineer Nanodegree
Per-criterion
Four well-paced courses move from TensorFlow basics through CNNs, NLP and time-series forecasting, with 16 Python assignments and 32 graded exercises. The structure is praised as clear and logical, but recurring reviewer criticism is that it leans heavily on the Keras API and treats underlying TensorFlow mechanics too lightly, making some lessons feel more like a "basic introduction to Keras rather than TensorFlow itself".
Laurence Moroney, former AI Advocacy Lead at Google and author of AI and Machine Learning for Coders, is consistently the highest-rated element. Reviewers call him "excellent, concise, and straight to the point" and credit him with making hard concepts genuinely approachable. The conversations with Andrew Ng woven through the first course add extra credibility and context.
At roughly $49 per month on Coursera Plus and completable in around two months at ten hours per week, the certificate can cost as little as one subscription cycle for a focused learner. With 222,000+ enrollees and a 4.7/5 average rating it has strong social proof for the price. The honest caveat is that individual Coursera course pages can be audited free, so the monetary value depends on how much you need the graded assignments and certificate itself.
Support is primarily the Coursera discussion forums. There is no live mentorship and no cohort structure, so debugging is mostly self-directed. Learners in the related Advanced Techniques Specialization noted a useful Slack community with responsive mentors, but the Developer certificate itself relies on peer forums. Graded labs are well-maintained and run in Google Colab, removing local setup friction.
The program teaches practical TensorFlow and Keras patterns used in real ML engineering jobs — CNNs, transfer learning, LSTM/GRU time-series, and NLP tokenisation — and was historically aligned with the Google TensorFlow Developer Certificate exam. Reviewers from Andrew Ng's Deep Learning Specialization called it a productive follow-up. The main gap: shallow coverage of production concerns — model serving, TFX pipelines, and deployment are not addressed.
Reviewers consistently praise the project curation and AWS SageMaker coverage, but the deep learning section is widely flagged as too short and the lectures lean engineering-first rather than theory-first.
Instructor quality on individual lessons is strong (clear videos, mix of Jupyter notebooks and text), but the program has many authors and no single pedagogical voice across the four-course track.
The biggest drag on the score. Monthly subscription at $249-399 makes the total cost roughly $800-1500+, and reviewers consistently compare it unfavourably to cheaper Coursera, Georgia Tech OMSCS or fast.ai alternatives.
Mentor-graded project reviews are the most praised feature across the entire sample. Multiple reviewers report personalised written feedback within 30-45 minutes and treat this as the main differentiator vs MOOCs.
Projects are real and end-to-end (SageMaker deployment, sentiment analysis, capstone) which transfers better than passive video courses, but reviewers flag heavy use of boilerplate code as a brake on independent skill-building.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.