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Crass_Oscillator said:He was just arguing that you should be wary of the hype, not that it's all useless (at least that's how I interpreted it).
There are lots of absurd pronouncements made by fan boys of the subject, as is the won't of fan boys of anything. The CEO (or some other higher up) of kaggle in an interview with Slate suggested that expert knowledge is actually a detriment, and that most problems will be solved using data science approaches, for instance (which is partially true but mostly delusional). Less obnoxiously, I've had numerous encounters with famous ML researchers where bullish proclamations about the application of ML to field X will have Y result, only to later see the media uncritically propagate them. Could novel ML techniques be useful in control engineering? In principle, yes. In practice, every control engineer I know finds the idea amusing at best. Can you do electronic structure calculations with neural nets and will this be the end of all other computational chemistry methods? Probably not. Etc etc.
And in the hype phase, fan boys breed prodigiously. Just think critically.
I agree in general, but regarding machine learning and control engineering, how about things like http://video.mit.edu/watch/meet-2011-tr35-winner-pieter-abbeel-4/ ?http://video.mit.edu/watch/meet-2011-tr35-winner-pieter-abbeel-4/