Teachable Machine is a web tool that makes it fast and easy to create machine learning models for your projects, no coding required. Train a computer to recognize your images, sounds, & poses, then export your model for your sites, apps, and more.
Teachable Machine is used in school systems across the world to teach all ages about A.I. You will find it in the curriculum of MIT (Media Lab and CSAIL) and Stanford. It is used in global politics to help train policy makers. It was a finalist for Fast Company's World Changing Ideas of 2020 and a Webby Winner for Technical Achievement.
We published an academic paper in the world's leading HCI and Interaction Design Conference, CHI titled Teachable Machine: Approachable Web-Based Tool for Exploring Machine Learning Classification and we were awarded a patent for Node-based interface for machine learning classification modeling.


Project Euphonia
Project Euphonia was announced by Sundar in the Google IO keynote in 2019. It is a Google Research initiative focused on helping people with non-standard speech be better understood. For several months, Irene Alvarado and I routinely traveled to Boston to visit the Steve Saling ALS Residence alongside developing Teachable Machine, we came prepared with prototypes and worked closely with Steve and others at the residence to invent novel accessibility tools.
My work for Project Euphonia was an integral part of Sundar's Google IO keynote.

Millions of models have been trained with Teachable Machine using transfer learning with Tensorflow.js; it remains the easiest way to introduce anyone to this technology that is shaping all of our lives. It is beyond rewarding when I am shown something created by others or am told their first introduction to AI was with Teachable Machine. There are so many projects I wish I could highlight.
- YouTube: Dan Shiffman's the Coding Train
- YouTube: Google Cloud - ML without Code
- Twitter: Nicole He's hourglass tracker
- Github: Gesture-based Instagram Liker