Generative AI for Everyone 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
Generative AI for Everyone
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (introtodeeplearning.com) · AI & ML Courses
MIT 6.S191 Introduction to Deep Learning
Per-criterion
Reviewers praise the clarity of the AI fundamentals, prompting and "AI strategy" framings. The trade-off is real — coverage is broad and shallow, with no hands-on coding, so technical learners outgrow it within hours.
Andrew Ng's clarity, calm pacing and ability to explain generative AI without jargon dominate praise across Coursera, Medium and HN. Multiple reviewers single out his rare ability to keep the topic realistic without hype.
Free to audit, $49 for the certificate. Reviewers describe the certificate price as fair for 6 hours of brand-name instruction, but several flag that quizzes and the credential sit behind a paywall and the course is not included in Coursera Plus.
Active DeepLearning.AI community forum and Coursera discussion boards, but no mentorship or structured Q&A. A recurring complaint on Coursera reviews is grading and assessment-submission bugs that block certificate completion.
Skills transfer well to non-technical roles — prompting, task analysis, evaluating AI use cases — and reviewers report applying lessons at work immediately. The gap is technical depth — nobody finishes this course able to build AI systems.
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.