Self-Driving Car Engineer Nanodegree vs Deep Learning Specialization
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Udacity · AI & ML Courses
Self-Driving Car Engineer Nanodegree
DeepLearning.AI (Coursera) · AI & ML Courses
Deep Learning Specialization
Per-criterion
Reviewers praise the breadth — CV, sensor fusion, localisation, planning, control, ROS on Carla. The caveat is the curriculum is deep-learning-heavy and some flag this as the wrong architectural bet for real autonomous vehicles.
Sebastian Thrun, David Silver and the rotating industry instructors (Mercedes, BMW, NVIDIA, Uber ATG, Waymo alumni) get steady positive mentions. Reviewers who took the free CS373 first describe the nanodegree as a paid extension.
The biggest drag on the score. Original 2016-2017 price was ~$2,400; current pricing sits around $249-399/month, total ~$1,000-1,500. Flagged against free MIT 6.S094, MIT 6.832 and Stanford CS221/CS231n alternatives.
Original cohorts received mentor-graded project reviews and praised them highly, but later reviewers — including one of the most-cited HN voices — report Udacity "got rid of this feature" for self-paced learners. Slack community partially compensates.
Projects are unusually applied — behavioural cloning, lane finding, sensor fusion, path planning, and a final integration on Udacity's real Carla vehicle via ROS. The gap is that industry has moved past the deep-learning-heavy approach taught.
Praised for strong intuition-building and the NumPy-first implementation in Course 1, but reviewers note the curriculum predates Transformers and LLMs and the final Sequence Models course lands less cleanly than the earlier ones.
Andrew Ng's pedagogy gets near-universal praise across HN and blogs over an eight-year window. Multiple reviewers describe him as the clearest ML instructor they have ever had; critical comments are essentially absent.
Strong content per dollar at the $49/month Coursera price for learners who finish in 2-3 months, but the subscription model penalises slow learners and the paywall around graded assignments draws consistent complaints.
Browser-hosted Jupyter notebooks with auto-grading remove install friction, and the DeepLearning.AI community forum is active. Several reviewers flag homework infrastructure as occasionally flaky.
Builds a credible foundation and the bias/variance and error-analysis material in Course 3 transfers directly to real work. Reviewers consistently note you still need projects, Kaggle or a portfolio before the certificate matters to employers.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.