Book Image

Machine Learning with Go Quick Start Guide

By : Michael Bironneau, Toby Coleman
Book Image

Machine Learning with Go Quick Start Guide

By: Michael Bironneau, Toby Coleman

Overview of this book

Machine learning is an essential part of today's data-driven world and is extensively used across industries, including financial forecasting, robotics, and web technology. This book will teach you how to efficiently develop machine learning applications in Go. The book starts with an introduction to machine learning and its development process, explaining the types of problems that it aims to solve and the solutions it offers. It then covers setting up a frictionless Go development environment, including running Go interactively with Jupyter notebooks. Finally, common data processing techniques are introduced. The book then teaches the reader about supervised and unsupervised learning techniques through worked examples that include the implementation of evaluation metrics. These worked examples make use of the prominent open-source libraries GoML and Gonum. The book also teaches readers how to load a pre-trained model and use it to make predictions. It then moves on to the operational side of running machine learning applications: deployment, Continuous Integration, and helpful advice for effective logging and monitoring. At the end of the book, readers will learn how to set up a machine learning project for success, formulating realistic success criteria and accurately translating business requirements into technical ones.
Table of Contents (9 chapters)

The continuous delivery feedback loop

Continuous delivery (CD) is the practice of using short feedback loops in the software development life cycle to ensure that the resulting application can be released at any moment in time[1]. While there are alternative approaches to release management, we will only consider this one because creating a meaningful, short—and therefore automated—feedback loop with ML applications presents unique challenges that are not created by alternative methodologies that may not require this degree of automation.

The CD feedback loop consists of the following process:

Fig. 1: The continuous delivery feedback loop

Developing

The development portion of the feedback loop is what we have...