Python for Data Science and Machine Learning Bootcamp vs Machine Learning A-Z: AI, Python & R + ChatGPT Prize
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Udemy · AI & ML Courses
Python for Data Science and Machine Learning Bootcamp
Udemy · AI & ML Courses
Machine Learning A-Z: AI, Python & R + ChatGPT Prize
Per-criterion
At 25 hours the course covers Python fundamentals, NumPy, Pandas, Matplotlib, Seaborn, Plotly, Cufflinks, Scikit-Learn, and a closing primer on TensorFlow and Spark. Reviewers consistently call it comprehensive and well-paced for a beginner audience, praising the Jupyter notebooks that accompany every lecture. The recurring criticism is that the machine-learning section trades mathematical depth for breadth — algorithms are shown using Scikit-Learn templates, but the "why" behind model choices is explained only lightly. The deep-learning and Spark sections draw specific complaints about being outdated, with one reviewer noting a "sudden jump to older version of TF towards the end." For a broad, practical introduction, the content is generous; for rigorous theory, learners will need a companion resource.
Jose Portilla holds a BS and MS in Mechanical Engineering from Santa Clara University and has trained data science and Python teams at General Electric, Cigna, Credit Suisse, McKinsey, and Starbucks. Across all reviewed sources his teaching style is the most praised element: reviewers describe him as clear, well organised, and able to make intimidating topics feel approachable. Named student comments on CourseDuck include "very good in explaining" and "brings you to the next level." A career-changer on a forum noted the course "gives you an intuitive sense of the models commonly used in ML," crediting Portilla specifically. The only recurring complaint is that later sections receive less polish than the Python and Pandas core.
This is a one-time Udemy purchase that routinely sells at deep discount — commonly cited as under $15. With 25 hours of HD video, full Jupyter notebook access, and lifetime updates, reviewers repeatedly describe it as the best money they spent. One forum user wrote "best money I spent was taking this inexpensive class." With over 400,000 students enrolled and a 4.6 average from ~158,880 ratings, the social proof for the value proposition is unusually strong for a paid course. The comparison to multi-thousand-dollar in-person bootcamps is a recurring framing in positive reviews.
There is no live mentorship, graded project feedback, or cohort structure. The Udemy Q&A section is the main support channel, and reviewers report it as active enough to get basic questions answered. However, compared to structured programmes with teaching assistants or mentor calls, self-directed learners who get stuck on harder concepts are largely on their own. No dedicated community forum or office hours are offered. The support score reflects this limitation relative to other programme types, not a failing of the course by its own standards as a self-paced lecture series.
The course builds genuine, hands-on familiarity with the Python data-science stack — NumPy, Pandas, and Scikit-Learn — that is directly transferable to day-to-day analyst and data science work. Portfolio-ready projects on real datasets are a repeated positive. Career-changers on forums credit it as a pivotal step toward entering the field. The ceiling is that it is an on-ramp rather than a finishing course: it does not cover model deployment, production pipelines, experiment tracking, or the broader software engineering context around data science. Reviewers are consistent that substantial follow-on practice and deeper study are needed before tackling meaningful real-world projects independently.
Around 44 hours covering regression, classification, clustering, association rule learning, reinforcement learning, NLP, and deep learning, in both Python and R. Reviewers call it comprehensive and well paced; the main gap is that NLP only reaches bag-of-words and math theory stays light.
Kirill Eremenko and Hadelin de Ponteves are the most-praised element — reviewers say they make a complicated topic accessible to a wide audience and break complex concepts into digestible lessons, with Hadelin's step-by-step coding singled out repeatedly.
A one-time Udemy purchase that frequently goes on deep discount, with ~44 hours and lifetime access. With roughly 800K enrolments and a 4.5 average, reviewers consistently say it is worth it even at full price for the breadth you get.
No live mentorship or graded project feedback, but reviewers highlight an unusually active Q&A community — "dozens of questions being filed every day" — as where the course really shines for getting unstuck.
Template-based, hands-on coding on real datasets builds working intuition, but it is an on-ramp rather than a job guarantee. Deployment/production is barely covered and it "won't make you an AI guru" — a strong first step, not a finishing course.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.