Machine Learning Specialization vs Machine Learning Scientist with Python
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 & Stanford Online (Coursera) · AI & ML Courses
Machine Learning Specialization
DataCamp · AI & ML Courses
Machine Learning Scientist with Python
Per-criterion
Praised for intuitive explanations and the expanded neural networks unit, but reviewers note the new version trades depth for accessibility — backprop is brushed past, RL feels like a preview.
Andrew Ng's pedagogy gets near-universal praise across HN and blogs. Multiple commenters describe him as the best instructor they ever had; complaints are essentially absent.
Content is strong relative to cost, and auditing remains possible. The friction comes from Coursera's subscription gating around grading and certificates — a recurring HN gripe.
Browser-hosted Jupyter notebooks with auto-grading remove a major friction point from the original. The community forum is active but not deeply mentioned in reviews.
Builds a real foundation in ideas and Python tooling, but datasets are clean and deployment is out of scope. Reviewers flag the need to supplement with Kaggle or a portfolio project.
Career track is broad and well-sequenced across 23 courses, but reviewers consistently describe the ML chapters as "crash courses" — useful introductions that lack the depth of Coursera, edX or fast.ai.
Individual instructors like Andreas Müller, Allen Downey and Hugo Bowne-Anderson get strong praise, but there is no single pedagogical voice across the 23-course track and reviewers note quality varies course by course.
At roughly $13-16 per month on the annual plan the breadth of access (600+ courses) is hard to beat. Monthly billing at $39 and the year-two renewal price draw consistent complaints.
No live mentorship or cohort Q&A — learners self-direct through hints, AI assistant and community forums. The DataLab AI explainer helps but is not a substitute for human support.
Sandbox environment removes setup friction but does not teach IDEs, virtual environments, git or messy real-world data pipelines. Fill-in-the-blank exercises limit independent problem-solving.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.