
ZenML's Month of MLOps Recap
The ZenML MLOps Competition ran from October 10 to November 11, 2022, and was a wonderful expression of open-source MLOps problem-solving.

The ZenML MLOps Competition ran from October 10 to November 11, 2022, and was a wonderful expression of open-source MLOps problem-solving.
Transform quickstart PyTorch code as a ZenML pipeline and add experiment tracking and secrets manager component.

Test automation is tedious enough with traditional software engineering, but machine learning complexities can make it even less appealing. Using Deepchecks with ZenML pipelines can get you started as quickly as it takes you to read this article.

How to use ZenML and KServe to deploy serverless ML models in just a few steps.

This week I spoke with Emeli Dral, co-founder and CTO of Evidently, an open-source tool tackling the problem of monitoring of models and data for machine learning. We discussed the challenges around building a tool that is both straightforward to use while also customizable and powerful.

ZenML combines forces with Great Expectations to add data validation to the list of continuous processes automated with MLOps. Discover why data validation is an important part of MLOps and try the new integration with a hands-on tutorial.

I spoke with Karthik Kannan, cofounder and CTO of Envision, a company that builds on top of the Google Glass and using Augmented Reality features of phones to allow visually impaired people to better sense the environment or objects around them.

Getting started with distributed ML in the cloud: How to orchestrate ML workflows natively on Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS).

How ZenML lets you have the best of both worlds, serverless managed infrastructure without the vendor lock in.

This week I spoke with Iva Gumnishka, the founder of Humans in the Loop. They are an organization that provides data annotation and collection services. Their teams are primarily made up of those who have been affected by conflict and now are asylum seekers or refugees.

We put together a list of 48 open-source annotation and labeling tools to support different kinds of machine-learning projects.

This week I spoke with Ben Wilson, author of 'Machine Learning Engineering in Action', a jam-backed guide to all the lessons that Ben has learned over his years working to help companies get models out into the world and run them in production.