comparison

A machine learning roadmap that actually links the resources — in order

the short answer

Most machine learning roadmaps show you the topics but leave you to find and sequence the actual resources; aipath is a free, ordered learning path where every module links the best thing to read or watch plus runnable code and a short checkpoint, so you follow it step by step instead of assembling it yourself.

Search 'machine learning roadmap' and you get the same shape every time: a tidy diagram of boxes — linear algebra, probability, classic ML, neural nets, deep learning, a specialisation — connected by arrows. It is genuinely useful for seeing the territory. The trouble is that a diagram of topics is not a thing you can follow. You still have to find the right resource for each box, judge whether it is any good, work out what order to actually do them in, and find code to practise with. That research is most of the work, and it is exactly where people stall.

aipath keeps the roadmap idea but does that work for you. Instead of a box that says 'convolutional neural networks', you get an ordered module that links a specific, well-regarded resource to learn it, runnable code to try it, and a short checkpoint to confirm it landed before you move on. This page compares a static roadmap with an ordered, resource-linked path so you can see which one you actually need.

4curated tracks, every step linked to a resource and runnable code

A map of topics vs. a path you can follow

A roadmap answers 'what are the topics, roughly in what order'. That is a real question, and a diagram answers it well. But it leaves three harder questions unanswered: which resource should I use for this topic, is it current and good, and what exactly do I do after I finish it? Answering those for every box is hours of searching, comparing, and second-guessing — and the moment one link is outdated or one step is ambiguous, momentum dies.

An ordered path answers all three. aipath's curated tracks — computer vision, nlp and transformers, generative ai, and reinforcement learning — break each topic into modules, and each module already points at a resource worth your time, the code to practise it, and a checkpoint that tells you whether to move on or revisit. You spend your time learning instead of curating your own syllabus.

Where the resources come from, and what aipath isn't

aipath does not host courses or replace them — it links the good ones. The curated tracks point at established, mostly free material (think foundational university courses, canonical papers, and respected tutorials), and the generated paths pull current resources with live web search so the links are not years stale. The depth still comes from those underlying resources; aipath is the ordering, the code, and the checkpoints around them.

It is also worth being clear about what aipath is not. It is not an accredited course and gives no certificate, it is not a job guarantee, and there is no community or mentor attached. The checkpoints are self-checks to keep you honest, not graded exams. What it is, is the part a static roadmap leaves out: a concrete, ordered route with the resources and code already attached, for free and with no account.

A static roadmap vs. aipath

Static roadmap (diagram / list)aipath
What it gives youA map of topics and orderOrdered modules you follow step by step
The resourcesYou find and vet themLinked for each step
Runnable codeNot includedPaired with every module
Knowing you're readyOn youA checkpoint per module
Staying currentOften goes staleGenerated paths use live web search
PriceUsually freeFree, no account

frequently asked

What is the best way to follow a machine learning roadmap?
Pick a roadmap whose steps link the actual resource and some code, not just the topic names, and do them in order with a way to check you understood each one. aipath is built around exactly that: ordered modules, a linked resource and runnable code per step, and a short checkpoint.
Does aipath include the learning resources or just the topics?
The resources. Each module links a specific resource to read or watch plus runnable code, rather than only naming the topic and leaving you to search.
Do I need a degree to follow it?
No. aipath is a free, self-serve path to public resources. It is not accredited and gives no certificate; it just orders the route and links what to use at each step.
Is it really free?
Yes. aipath is free with no account and no paywall between steps.

Last updated June 7, 2026

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