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This is a very comprehensive resource that not only offers the books, but a canned curriculum(Eurisko) that could be customized to your audience. Say, your colleagues at work(considering they came from STEM background with rusty vector calc like me) A question to the OP is, would it be possible for someone like me to "adapt" this curriculum to conduct my own version of "Eurisko"? What are the licensing terms?



Not entirely sure I understand the question, but I'll answer to the best of my understanding: If you'd like to teach a course using one of my textbooks, then go ahead -- it's freely available online so that anyone who wants to learn from it can do so. All I ask is that if you pull readings/problems from the book, you cite the source, like how it's done when a professor pieces together a course using different readings/problems from different textbooks.

But, to clarify: the Eurisko book (Introduction to Algorithms and Machine Learning) only covers a small slice of the total roadmap from high school math to cutting-edge ML/AI. The other resources I recommend are the ones I mention in this post.


Thanks for taking the time to answer. And you did answer the core of my question. Indeed, i will be citing the books as the source. Thanks again for making this resource available for free.


No problem, glad it's helpful! Feel free to reach out anytime.


Thanks for your generous offer. Will ofcourse reach out.cheers




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