Open Culture's "10 Signs of Intelligent Life at YouTube" features "intellectually redeemable" channels from
UC Berkeley, @GoogleTalks, TheNobelPrize, TED Talks, FORA.tv, the European Graduate School, the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, BBC Worldwide, National Geographic, PBS, UChannel, MIT, Vanderbilt, and
USC.
posted by Soup
on Dec 27, 2007 -
21 comments
Gravity Monuments were erected on several college campuses in the 1960's and 1970's by the
Gravity Research Foundation "to remind students of the blessings forthcoming when science determines what gravity is, how it works, and how it may be controlled." I regularly visited the one at Colby College, in Maine. Emory
had one, and apparently
SMU did as well. Anyone know of others?
posted by mmahaffie
on Sep 7, 2004 -
15 comments
This year, MIT is free. Well, not really -- you won't get the degree, and you won't get to talk to the top minds in science or stay in
a really cool dorm. But
OpenCourseWare provides,
as Wired puts it, "Every lecture [sometimes on video, sometimes only the notes], every handout, every quiz." Curious about
Psycholinguistics?
Urban Transportation, Land Use, and the Environment?
Non-linear Programming?
Cognitive & Behavioral Genetics?
String Theory for Undergraduates?
They are in Kenya.
posted by Tlogmer
on Sep 4, 2003 -
14 comments
A fine football story for the year... Oklahoma won the National Championship, and Penn State did not do so well, however the local hero walks out of the hospital to get on with the rest of his life. Granted the injury was a bruise and Dr. Wayne Sebastianelli saved his life, but my question is how long before we'll see the successful repair of spinal cord injuries? Will
Christopher Reeve walk again?
posted by brent
on Jan 5, 2001 -
4 comments