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Mastering Azure Machine Learning

You're reading from  Mastering Azure Machine Learning

Product type Book
Published in Apr 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789807554
Pages 436 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Authors (2):
Christoph Körner Christoph Körner
Profile icon Christoph Körner
Kaijisse Waaijer Kaijisse Waaijer
Profile icon Kaijisse Waaijer
View More author details

Table of Contents (20) Chapters

Preface Section 1: Azure Machine Learning
1. Building an end-to-end machine learning pipeline in Azure 2. Choosing a machine learning service in Azure Section 2: Experimentation and Data Preparation
3. Data experimentation and visualization using Azure 4. ETL, data preparation, and feature extraction 5. Azure Machine Learning pipelines 6. Advanced feature extraction with NLP Section 3: Training Machine Learning Models
7. Building ML models using Azure Machine Learning 8. Training deep neural networks on Azure 9. Hyperparameter tuning and Automated Machine Learning 10. Distributed machine learning on Azure 11. Building a recommendation engine in Azure Section 4: Optimization and Deployment of Machine Learning Models
12. Deploying and operating machine learning models 13. MLOps—DevOps for machine learning 14. What's next? Index

Managing data and datasets in the cloud

When you run an ML experiment or pipeline on your local development machine, you often don't need to manage your datasets as they are stored locally. However, as soon as you start training an ML model on remote compute targets, such as a VM in the cloud, you must make sure that the script can access the training data. And if you deploy a model that requires a certain dataset during scoring—for example, the lookup data for labels and the like—then this environment needs to access the data as well. As you can see, it makes sense to abstract the datasets for an ML project, both from the point of view of physical access and access permissions.

First, we will show how you can create a data store object to connect the Azure Machine Learning workspace to other data services, such as blob or file storage, data lake storage, and relational data stores, such as SQL Server and PostgreSQL. Once a data store is attached, we can register...

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