Book Image

The Definitive Guide to Google Vertex AI

By : Jasmeet Bhatia, Kartik Chaudhary
4 (1)
Book Image

The Definitive Guide to Google Vertex AI

4 (1)
By: Jasmeet Bhatia, Kartik Chaudhary

Overview of this book

While AI has become an integral part of every organization today, the development of large-scale ML solutions and management of complex ML workflows in production continue to pose challenges for many. Google’s unified data and AI platform, Vertex AI, directly addresses these challenges with its array of MLOPs tools designed for overall workflow management. This book is a comprehensive guide that lets you explore Google Vertex AI’s easy-to-advanced level features for end-to-end ML solution development. Throughout this book, you’ll discover how Vertex AI empowers you by providing essential tools for critical tasks, including data management, model building, large-scale experimentations, metadata logging, model deployments, and monitoring. You’ll learn how to harness the full potential of Vertex AI for developing and deploying no-code, low-code, or fully customized ML solutions. This book takes a hands-on approach to developing u deploying some real-world ML solutions on Google Cloud, leveraging key technologies such as Vision, NLP, generative AI, and recommendation systems. Additionally, this book covers pre-built and turnkey solution offerings as well as guidance on seamlessly integrating them into your ML workflows. By the end of this book, you’ll have the confidence to develop and deploy large-scale production-grade ML solutions using the MLOps tooling and best practices from Google.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
1
Part 1:The Importance of MLOps in a Real-World ML Deployment
4
Part 2: Machine Learning Tools for Custom Models on Google Cloud
14
Part 3: Prebuilt/Turnkey ML Solutions Available in GCP
18
Part 4: Building Real-World ML Solutions with Google Cloud

Conventions used

There are a number of text conventions used throughout this book.

Code in text: Indicates code words in text, database table names, folder names, filenames, file extensions, pathnames, dummy URLs, user input, and Twitter handles. Here is an example: “By default, the Jupyter server starts on port 8888, but in case, this port is unavailable so it finds the next available port.”

A block of code is set as follows:

export PROJECT=$(gcloud config list project --format     "value(core.project)")
docker build . -f Dockerfile.example -t "gcr.io/${PROJECT}/tf-custom:latest"
docker push "gcr.io/${PROJECT}/tf-custom:latest"

Any command-line input or output is written as follows:

$ mkdir css
$ cd css

Bold: Indicates a new term, an important word, or words that you see on screen. For instance, words in menus or dialog boxes appear in bold. Here is an example: “In the Environment field, select Custom Container.”

Tips or important notes

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