When a 2024 comment thread appeared on the tech blog Javarevisited, it highlighted a clear trend: learners are actively seeking up‑to‑date AI courses across multiple platforms.

The thread, which followed the blog’s 2019 article “Top 5 Udemy Courses to Learn Artificial Intelligence in 2026 – Best of Lot,” drew attention to offerings from DataCamp, Educative, and LinkedIn Learning. Comments from the blog’s author, Javin Paul, and an anonymous user underscored the growing demand for contemporary AI training.

Udemy, the U.S.‑based education‑tech marketplace founded in 2010, reported millions of individual users by early 2025. Its catalog now includes a 2025 course titled “Deep Agent – Multi Agent RAG With Gemini And LangChain,” updated December 24 2025, which claims to give hands‑on guidance for building AI agents using Google Gemini, LangChain v1, and Retrieval‑Augmented Generation techniques. Another listing, simply titled “AI Courses,” packs 15.6 GB of content and received the same update. A separate YouTube video from 2025 advertises a method for obtaining paid Udemy courses for free while still earning certificates, targeting learners in 2026.

DataCamp, known for interactive data‑science education, offers a range of AI‑focused courses. Its website lists topics such as large language models, prompt engineering, workflow automation, and building intelligent systems with Python, R, and SQL. The platform is designed for both non‑coders and aspiring AI engineers, providing a pathway to acquire AI skills without extensive programming experience. A 2026 Medium article enumerates eight DataCamp courses that concentrate on AI, ChatGPT, and machine learning, indicating continued growth in the platform’s AI curriculum.

LinkedIn Learning, a subsidiary of LinkedIn and part of Microsoft since 2016, delivers video courses taught by industry experts across business, creative, and technology categories. The catalog includes courses on AI anxiety and AI readiness for managers, some of which are free. Educative, another provider, focuses on interactive courses covering AI, system design, and interview preparation, targeting software developers who learn best by building. A 2026 blog post on Educative lists five courses that prepare learners for roles such as LLM engineer, AI architect, or tech leader, underscoring the platform’s emphasis on practical, hands‑on learning.

The comments on Javarevisited, coupled with the offerings on Udemy, DataCamp, LinkedIn Learning, and Educative, illustrate a broadening ecosystem of AI education. Learners now have access to video‑based, on‑demand courses, interactive coding lessons, and project‑based learning that span foundational theory and real‑world deployment. While the platforms differ in delivery style and target audience, all provide pathways for individuals to acquire AI skills relevant to current industry demands.

As AI continues to evolve, the proliferation of these courses suggests that educational providers will keep expanding curricula to cover emerging topics such as multi‑agent systems, retrieval‑augmented generation, and large‑language‑model engineering. Industry analysts note that the growth in AI course enrollment has outpaced many other tech‑education categories in the past year.