AI Insights
Get started in AI with these $40 machine learning courses
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BleepingComputer Deals
If you’ve been meaning to level up your AI and machine learning skills, now’s a good time to dive in. This data science and machine learning bundle is currently available for just $39.99 (reg. $280), giving you lifetime access to 10 expert-led courses designed to build your skills from the ground up.
Whether you’re already in IT or looking to shift into a more data-focused career path, this bundle has something for every experience level. You’ll start with the fundamentals of Python programming and gradually work your way through more advanced topics like deep learning, computer vision, and working with real-world data sets.
Courses cover popular tools like:
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Python and Pandas for data handling
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TensorFlow and PyTorch for building neural networks
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NumPy and Matplotlib for analysis and visualization
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Scikit-learn for machine learning algorithms
What makes this bundle especially valuable is its focus on practical, hands-on learning. You’ll work on projects that mirror real-world applications—think predictive modeling, fraud detection, and even AI-powered security systems. And with lifetime access, you can learn at your own pace and revisit material as needed.
In a world where automation, analytics, and AI are changing the way leading companies and professionals detect threats and protect data, having this skill set under your belt makes a lot of sense, especially if you work in cybersecurity, IT, or software development.
There’s no subscription here, just a one-time fee that gets you unlimited access to all 10 courses. At under $40, this bundle is a low-risk, high-reward investment in your professional toolkit.
Ready to build smarter systems and sharpen your edge in the tech industry? Grab these data science and machine learning courses while they’re still available for just $39.99 for life. No coupon needed.
Prices subject to change.
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AI Insights
Intro robotics students build AI-powered robot dogs from scratch
Equipped with a starter robot hardware kit and cutting-edge lessons in artificial intelligence, students in CS 123: A Hands-On Introduction to Building AI-Enabled Robots are mastering the full spectrum of robotics – from motor control to machine learning. Now in its third year, the course has students build and enhance an adorable quadruped robot, Pupper, programming it to walk, navigate, respond to human commands, and perform a specialized task that they showcase in their final presentations.
The course, which evolved from an independent study project led by Stanford’s robotics club, is now taught by Karen Liu, professor of computer science in the School of Engineering, in addition to Jie Tan from Google DeepMind and Stuart Bowers from Apple and Hands-On Robotics. Throughout the 10-week course, students delve into core robotics concepts, such as movement and motor control, while connecting them to advanced AI topics.
“We believe that the best way to help and inspire students to become robotics experts is to have them build a robot from scratch,” Liu said. “That’s why we use this specific quadruped design. It’s the perfect introductory platform for beginners to dive into robotics, yet powerful enough to support the development of cutting-edge AI algorithms.”
What makes the course especially approachable is its low barrier to entry – students need only basic programming skills to get started. From there, the students build up the knowledge and confidence to tackle complex robotics and AI challenges.
Robot creation goes mainstream
Pupper evolved from Doggo, built by the Stanford Student Robotics club to offer people a way to create and design a four-legged robot on a budget. When the team saw the cute quadruped’s potential to make robotics both approachable and fun, they pitched the idea to Bowers, hoping to turn their passion project into a hands-on course for future roboticists.
“We wanted students who were still early enough in their education to explore and experience what we felt like the future of AI robotics was going to be,” Bowers said.
This current version of Pupper is more powerful and refined than its predecessors. It’s also irresistibly adorable and easier than ever for students to build and interact with.
“We’ve come a long way in making the hardware better and more capable,” said Ankush Kundan Dhawan, one of the first students to take the Pupper course in the fall of 2021 before becoming its head teaching assistant. “What really stuck with me was the passion that instructors had to help students get hands-on with real robots. That kind of dedication is very powerful.”
Code come to life
Building a Pupper from a starter hardware kit blends different types of engineering, including electrical work, hardware construction, coding, and machine learning. Some students even produced custom parts for their final Pupper projects. The course pairs weekly lectures with hands-on labs. Lab titles like Wiggle Your Big Toe and Do What I Say keep things playful while building real skills.
CS 123 students ready to show off their Pupper’s tricks. | Harry Gregory
Over the initial five weeks, students are taught the basics of robotics, including how motors work and how robots can move. In the next phase of the course, students add a layer of sophistication with AI. Using neural networks to improve how the robot walks, sees, and responds to the environment, they get a glimpse of state-of-the-art robotics in action. Many students also use AI in other ways for their final projects.
“We want them to actually train a neural network and control it,” Bowers said. “We want to see this code come to life.”
By the end of the quarter this spring, students were ready for their capstone project, called the “Dog and Pony Show,” where guests from NVIDIA and Google were present. Six teams had Pupper perform creative tasks – including navigating a maze and fighting a (pretend) fire with a water pick – surrounded by the best minds in the industry.
“At this point, students know all the essential foundations – locomotion, computer vision, language – and they can start combining them and developing state-of-the-art physical intelligence on Pupper,” Liu said.
“This course gives them an overview of all the key pieces,” said Tan. “By the end of the quarter, the Pupper that each student team builds and programs from scratch mirrors the technology used by cutting-edge research labs and industry teams today.”
All ready for the robotics boom
The instructors believe the field of AI robotics is still gaining momentum, and they’ve made sure the course stays current by integrating new lessons and technology advances nearly every quarter.
This Pupper was mounted with a small water jet to put out a pretend fire. | Harry Gregory
Students have responded to the course with resounding enthusiasm and the instructors expect interest in robotics – at Stanford and in general – will continue to grow. They hope to be able to expand the course, and that the community they’ve fostered through CS 123 can contribute to this engaging and important discipline.
“The hope is that many CS 123 students will be inspired to become future innovators and leaders in this exciting, ever-changing field,” said Tan.
“We strongly believe that now is the time to make the integration of AI and robotics accessible to more students,” Bowers said. “And that effort starts here at Stanford and we hope to see it grow beyond campus, too.”
AI Insights
Why Infuse Asset Management’s Q2 2025 Letter Signals a Shift to Artificial Intelligence and Cybersecurity Plays
The rapid evolution of artificial intelligence (AI) and the escalating complexity of cybersecurity threats have positioned these sectors as the next frontier of investment opportunity. Infuse Asset Management’s Q2 2025 letter underscores this shift, emphasizing AI’s transformative potential and the urgent need for robust cybersecurity infrastructure to mitigate risks. Below, we dissect the macroeconomic forces, sector-specific tailwinds, and portfolio reallocation strategies investors should consider in this new paradigm.
The AI Uprising: Macro Drivers of a Paradigm Shift
The AI revolution is accelerating at a pace that dwarfs historical technological booms. Take ChatGPT, which reached 800 million weekly active users by April 2025—a milestone achieved in just two years. This breakneck adoption is straining existing cybersecurity frameworks, creating a critical gap between innovation and defense.
Meanwhile, the U.S.-China AI rivalry is fueling a global arms race. China’s industrial robot installations surged from 50,000 in 2014 to 290,000 in 2023, outpacing U.S. adoption. This competition isn’t just about economic dominance—it’s a geopolitical chess match where data sovereignty, espionage, and AI-driven cyberattacks now loom large. The concept of “Mutually Assured AI Malfunction (MAIM)” highlights how even a single vulnerability could destabilize critical systems, much like nuclear deterrence but with far less predictability.
Cybersecurity: The New Infrastructure for an AI World
As AI systems expand into physical domains—think autonomous taxis or industrial robots—so do their vulnerabilities. In San Francisco, autonomous taxi providers now command 27% market share, yet their software is a prime target for cyberattacks. The decline in AI inference costs (outpacing historical declines in electricity and memory) has made it cheaper to deploy AI, but it also lowers the barrier for malicious actors to weaponize it.
Tech giants are pouring capital into AI infrastructure—NVIDIA and Microsoft alone increased CapEx from $33 billion to $212 billion between 2014 and 2024. This influx creates a vast, interconnected attack surface. Investors should prioritize cybersecurity firms that specialize in quantum-resistant encryption, AI-driven threat detection, and real-time infrastructure protection.
The Human Element: Skills Gaps and Strategic Shifts
The demand for AI expertise is soaring, but the workforce is struggling to keep pace. U.S. AI-related IT job postings have surged 448% since 2018, while non-AI IT roles have declined by 9%. This bifurcation signals two realities:
1. Cybersecurity skills are now mission-critical for safeguarding AI systems.
2. Ethical AI development and governance are emerging as compliance priorities, particularly in regulated industries.
The data will likely show a stark divergence, reinforcing the need for investors to back training platforms and cybersecurity firms bridging this skills gap.
Portfolio Reallocation: Where to Deploy Capital
Infuse’s insights suggest three actionable strategies:
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Core Holdings in Cybersecurity Leaders:
Target firms like CrowdStrike (CRWD) and Palo Alto Networks (PANW), which excel in AI-powered threat detection and endpoint security. -
Geopolitical Plays:
Invest in companies addressing data sovereignty and cross-border compliance, such as Palantir (PLTR) or Cloudflare (NET), which offer hybrid cloud solutions. -
Emerging Sectors:
Look to quantum computing security (e.g., Rigetti Computing (RGTI)) and AI governance platforms like DataRobot (NASDAQ: MGNI), which help enterprises audit and validate AI models.
The Bottom Line: AI’s Growth Requires a Security Foundation
The “productivity paradox” of AI—where speculative valuations outstrip tangible ROI—is real. Yet, cybersecurity is one area where returns are measurable: breaches cost companies millions, and defenses reduce risk. Investors should treat cybersecurity as the bedrock of their AI investments.
As Infuse’s letter implies, the next decade will belong to those who balance AI’s promise with ironclad security. Position portfolios accordingly.
JR Research
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