Download lectures from big name colleges--for free!
A list of links to useful mathematical textbooks available for free on the Internet.
They are all legal and maintained by their authors or by the legitimate publisher.
All the documents are in English. They are in a printable format - Postscript
or Adobe Portable Document Format. You are free to download, read and print them.
Here are some links to other sites offering lists of free mathematical textbooks.
Researchers at MIT have released a video and audio search tool that solves one of the most challenging problems in the field: how to break up a lengthy academic lecture into manageable chunks, pinpoint the location of keywords, and direct the user to them.
The Lecture Browser is a web interface to video recordings of lectures and seminars that have been indexed using automatic speech recognition technology. You can search for topics, much like a regular web search engine. If any results look relevant, you can play the video starting at the relevant point and see the synchronized transcript.
iTunes U has arrived, giving higher education institutions an ingenious
way to get audio and video content out to their students. Presentations,
performances, lectures, demonstrations, debates, tours, archival footage
— school is about to become even more inspiring.
Designed to be completely intuitive, iTunes U is based on the iTunes
Store.
A Georgia Tech professor has been running an informal experiment to test whether students who listen before class to lectures via their laptops or personal digital assistants perform better on tests...
For those who value the back channel in presentations and lectures this application may provide the perfect solution. Better than typical lecture theatre clickers where you can vote this approach allows you to send comments on the fly to the presenter via
A North Carolina State University professor who had been selling audio recordings of his lectures online was asked to stop on Wednesday after a university dean raised objections. Since late August, Robert L. Schrag, a professor of communication, had been