Hello, in optional session for learning more about U-Net, the course points us to the authors website, where we should fine a video introducing the model.
This video is no longer available and thus it would be great to have this section updated, pointing us to other resources for actual learning about U-Nets.
although video doesn’t work, there is a download video option in the left corner, did you try that?
here is what I did, i copied the link for the video and searched on YouTube and found the 5minute presentation you are looking for, sharing the link here
5minute teaser presentation of the U-Net
the other link to the original paper of U-net surely worked for me.
I’ve taken other 3 courses from deeplearning.ai, one in coursera many years ago, and the others from youtube only.
I had tried the download button, but the video doesn’t work there either. I appreciate you linking the video here, I was also able to find it on youtube, apologies this wasn’t clear in my initial post. My point here is that since the website is unmaintained (video and some links in the page are down) you may want to update the recommended resources.
can you please update the video link in the course page. although the link to the page works but the video doesn’t work, perhaps share the direct YouTube link in the page.
I don’t want to drag this out, but the moment you add a content to your course it becomes something you take care too. I can’t have content that relies on broken external links and brush of my responsibility to keep things up. Especially so when there’s a charge to the course. Plus it’s not like the course is covering this with other videos.
At the end of the day, you do as you please, I only brought it up because if it was me I would appreciate it.
You are completely correct. I agree that once we include a resource in the course, it is our duty to ensure it remains accessible and useful to you.
I just wanted to clarify my earlier point regarding the distinction between content we create and content we cite. Since this is an optional reading item pointing to an external resource, we are acting as a curator rather than the owner.
To use an analogy: let’s say you wrote a paper and I cited it. That doesn’t make me the author of that paper. If you decided to take the paper offline, or if the website hosting it had a technical glitch, I wouldn’t have any control over that because you are the owner. That is essentially what happened here. It seems the embedded link or the video player on the original site stopped working.
However, once that link breaks on our end, the responsibility to find a solution is definitely ours. I am glad you brought this up because it allowed us to find an alternative (the YouTube link) to ensure you and future learners still get the same experience. Thanks again for helping us catch this!