Randy Pausch Lecture: Time Management


Carnegie Mellon Professor Randy Pausch gave a lecture on Time Management at the University of Virginia in November 2007. Randy Pausch -- www.randypausch.com -- is a virtual reality pioneer, human-computer interaction researcher, co-founder of Carnegie Mellon's Entertainment Technology Center -- http -- and creator of the Alice -- www.alice.org -- software project. The slides for this lecture and high-res downloadable versions of this and other lectures can be found at www.cs.virginia.edu


Carnegie Mellon Randy Pausch Time Management Lecture

Einstein's General Theory of Relativity | Lecture 1


Lecture 1 of Leonard Susskind's Modern Physics concentrating on General Relativity. Recorded September 22, 2008 at Stanford University. This Stanford Continuing Studies course is the fourth of a six-quarter sequence of classes exploring the essential theoretical foundations of modern physics. The topics covered in this course focus on classical mechanics. Leonard Susskind is the Felix Bloch Professor of Physics at Stanford University. Stanford Continuing Studies: continuingstudies.stanford.edu About Leonard Susskind: www.stanford.edu Stanford University Channel on YouTube: www.youtube.com


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The Coming Collapse of the Middle Class


Distinguished law scholar Elizabeth Warren teaches contract law, bankruptcy, and commercial law at Harvard Law School. She is an outspoken critic of America's credit economy, which she has linked to the continuing rise in bankruptcy among the middle-class. Series: "UC Berkeley Graduate Council Lectures" [6/2007] [Public Affairs] [Business] [Show ID: 12620]


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Lecture 1 | Programming Methodology (Stanford)


Lecture by Professor Mehran Sahami for the Stanford Computer Science Department (CS106A). In the first lecture of the quarter, Professor Sahami provides an overview of the course and begins discussing computer programing. CS106A is an Introduction to the engineering of computer applications emphasizing modern software engineering principles: object-oriented design, decomposition, encapsulation, abstraction, and testing. Uses the Java programming language. Emphasis is on good programming style and the built-in facilities of the Java language. Complete Playlist for the Course: www.youtube.com CS106A at Stanford Unversity: www.stanford.edu Stanford Center for Professional Development: scpd.stanford.edu Stanford University: www.stanford.edu Stanford University Channel on YouTube www.youtube.com


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Lecture 1 | Machine Learning (Stanford)


Lecture by Professor Andrew Ng for Machine Learning (CS 229) in the Stanford Computer Science department. Professor Ng provides an overview of the course in this introductory meeting. This course provides a broad introduction to machine learning and statistical pattern recognition. Topics include supervised learning, unsupervised learning, learning theory, reinforcement learning and adaptive control. Recent applications of machine learning, such as to robotic control, data mining, autonomous navigation, bioinformatics, speech recognition, and text and web data processing are also discussed. Complete Playlist for the Course: www.youtube.com CS 229 Course Website: www.stanford.edu Stanford University: www.stanford.edu Stanford University Channel on YouTube: www.youtube.com


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Misquoting Jesus, Stanford Lecture, How Bible Got Tainted 1/10


"Misquoting Jesus: Scribes Who Altered Scripture and Readers Who May Never Know," a textual criticism of Biblical manuscript tampering by Bart Ehrman, Professor or Religious Studies of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Some Pondering about the stance of Muslim Theists: ponderingbrain.blogspot.com http video.google.com Is Bible True Word of God? (Debate between a Muslim and a Christian Scholar) video.google.com Is Jesus God? (Debate between a Muslim and a Christian Scholar) video.google.com Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) Mentioned by Name in the Bible. video.google.com video.google.com Qur'an and Bible in the light of science: video.google.com Is the Qur'an God's Word? video.google.com Islamic History of Europe (BBC Documentary) (Please have memory longer than the last 50 or 100 years): video.google.com A deep Historical Perspective of Muslims (by Ben Kingsley) video.google.com Here is an enlightening video of a revert to Islam (He explains what is Abrahmic religion about): video.google.com You are most welcome for any question you have. . . . . . . . . keywords: judaism, jews, jewish, Moses, Islam, Muhammad, Mohamed, Christianity, Jesus, Christ, Lord, God, Atheism, Theism, Richard Dawkins, Muslim, church, bible, quran, bibbia, qoran, koran, coran, curan, kuran, ahmed, deedat, zakir naik, hate, terrorism, terror, radical, palestine, iraq, afghanistan, saudi, arabia, uk, usa, reverts, reverted, converted, brother, sister, nasheed, women, oppression, veil hijab <b>...</b>


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Lecture 1 | Modern Physics: Classical Mechanics (Stanford)


Lecture 1 of Leonard Susskind's Modern Physics course concentrating on Classical Mechanics. Recorded October 15, 2007 at Stanford University. This Stanford Continuing Studies course is the first of a six-quarter sequence of classes exploring the essential theoretical foundations of modern physics. The topics covered in this course focus on classical mechanics. Leonard Susskind is the Felix Bloch Professor of Physics at Stanford University. Complete playlist for the course: youtube.com Stanford Continuing Studies: continuingstudies.stanford.edu About Leonard Susskind: www.stanford.edu Stanford University channel on YouTube: www.youtube.com


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Cosmology | Lecture 1


Lecture 1 of Leonard Susskind's Modern Physics concentrating on Cosmology. Recorded January 13, 2009 at Stanford University. This Stanford Continuing Studies course is the fifth of a six-quarter sequence of classes exploring the essential theoretical foundations of modern physics. The topics covered in this course focus on classical mechanics. Leonard Susskind is the Felix Bloch Professor of Physics at Stanford University. Stanford University: www.stanford.edu Stanford Continuing Studies continuingstudies.stanford.edu About Leonard Susskind: www.stanford.edu Stanford University Channel on YouTube: www.youtube.com


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Lecture 1 | Quantum Entanglements, Part 1 (Stanford)


Lecture 1 of Leonard Susskind's course concentrating on Quantum Entanglements (Part 1, Fall 2006). Recorded September 25, 2006 at Stanford University. This Stanford Continuing Studies course is the first of a three-quarter sequence of classes exploring the "quantum entanglements" in modern theoretical physics. Leonard Susskind is the Felix Bloch Professor of Physics at Stanford University. Complete playlist for the course: www.youtube.com Stanford Continuing Studies: continuingstudies.stanford.edu About Leonard Susskind: www.stanford.edu Stanford University channel on YouTube: www.youtube.com


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Burke Lecture: Stanley Martin Hauerwas


Dietrich Bonhoeffer is well known for his heroic opposition to the Nazis. Martin Hauerwas examines Bonhoeffer's understanding of lying and why it's appropriate to hold politics to a higher standard of truthful speech. This relationship between truth and politics is a particular challenge for democratic regimes. Series: Burke Lectureship on Religion & Society [4/2004] [Humanities] [Show ID: 8498]


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Lecture 1 | Modern Physics: Special Relativity (Stanford)


Lecture 1 of Leonard Susskind's Modern Physics course concentrating on Special Relativity. Recorded April 14, 2008 at Stanford University. This Stanford Continuing Studies course is the third of a six-quarter sequence of classes exploring the essential theoretical foundations of modern physics. The topics covered in this course focus on classical mechanics. Leonard Susskind is the Felix Bloch Professor of Physics at Stanford University. Complete Playlist for the Course: www.youtube.com Stanford Continuing Studies: continuingstudies.stanford.edu About Leonard Susskind: www.stanford.edu Stanford University Channel on YouTube: www.youtube.com


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Cluster Computing and MapReduce Lecture 1


Lecture 1 in a five part series introducing mapreduce and cluster computing. See code.google.com for slides and other resources.


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40/40 Vision Lecture: Neurology and the Passion for Art


Why is it that great works of art seem to have a universal appeal, transcending cultural and geographic boundaries? VS Ramachandran, director of UCSD's Center for Brain and Cognition has studied how the brain perceives works of art and thinks he may know the answer to this intriguing question. Series: "40/40 Vision Lectures (UCSD Faculty Lecture Series)" [11/2000] [Science] [Show ID: 5224]


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Confessions of a Converted Lecturer: Eric Mazur


Eric Mazur: "I thought I was a good teacher until I discovered my students were just memorizing information rather than learning to understand the material. Who was to blame? The students? The material? I will explain how I came to the agonizing conclusion that the culprit was neither of these. It was my teaching that caused students to fail! I will show how I have adjusted my approach to teaching and how it has improved my students' performance significantly." Eric Mazur is the Balkanski Professor of Physics and Applied Physics at Harvard University. An internationally recognized scientist and researcher, he leads a vigorous research program in optical physics and supervises one of the largest research groups in the Physics Department at Harvard University.


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Lecturing for learning: What lectures are good for


University of Sydney - Tom Angelo presents on lecturing for (deeper) learning in large classes


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Lecture 1 | Programming Paradigms (Stanford)


Lecture by Professor Jerry Cain for Programming Paradigms (CS107) in the Stanford University Computer Science department. Professor Cain provides an overview of the course. Programming Paradigms (CS107) introduces several programming languages, including C, Assembly, C++, Concurrent Programming, Scheme, and Python. The class aims to teach students how to write code for each of these individual languages and to understand the programming paradigms behind these languages. Complete Playlist for the Course: www.youtube.com CS 107 Course Website: www.CS107.stanford.edu Stanford University: www.stanford.edu Stanford University Channel on YouTube: www.youtube.com


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Lecture 2 | Machine Learning (Stanford)


Lecture by Professor Andrew Ng for Machine Learning (CS 229) in the Stanford Computer Science department. Professor Ng lectures on linear regression, gradient descent, and normal equations and discusses how they relate to machine learning. This course provides a broad introduction to machine learning and statistical pattern recognition. Topics include supervised learning, unsupervised learning, learning theory, reinforcement learning and adaptive control. Recent applications of machine learning, such as to robotic control, data mining, autonomous navigation, bioinformatics, speech recognition, and text and web data processing are also discussed. Complete Playlist for the Course: www.youtube.com CCS 229 Course Website: www.stanford.edu Stanford University: www.stanford.edu Stanford University Channel on YouTube: www.youtube.com


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Darwin's Legacy | Lecture 1


September 22, 2008 introductory lecture by William Durham for the Stanford Continuing Studies course on Darwin's Legacy (DAR 200). Professor Durham provides an overview of the course; Professor Robert Siegel touches upon "Darwin's Own Evolution;" Professor Durham returns for a talk on "Darwin's Data;" and the lecture concludes with a panel discussion moderated by Dr. Lynn Rothschild. Stanford Continuing Studies: csp.stanford.edu Stanford University www.stanford.edu Stanford Channel on YouTube: www.youtube.com


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Lecture 1 | The Fourier Transforms and its Applications


Lecture by Professor Brad Osgood for the Electrical Engineering course, The Fourier Transforms and its Applications (EE 261). Professor Osgood provides an overview of the course, then begins lecturing on Fourier series. The Fourier transform is a tool for solving physical problems. In this course the emphasis is on relating the theoretical principles to solving practical engineering and science problems. Complete Playlist for the Course: www.youtube.com EE 261 at Stanford University: eeclass.stanford.edu Stanford University: www.stanford.edu Stanford University Channel on YouTube www.youtube.com


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Lecture 3 | Programming Methodology (Stanford)


Lecture by Professor Mehran Sahami for the Stanford Computer Science Department (CS106A). Professor Sahami finishes his lecture on the program Karel by discussing common errors, comments, and advanced instructions. CS106A is an Introduction to the engineering of computer applications emphasizing modern software engineering principles: object-oriented design, decomposition, encapsulation, abstraction, and testing. Uses the Java programming language. Emphasis is on good programming style and the built-in facilities of the Java language. Complete Playlist for the Course: www.youtube.com CS106A at Stanford Unversity: www.stanford.edu Stanford Center for Professional Development: scpd.stanford.edu Stanford University: www.stanford.edu Stanford University Channel on YouTube www.youtube.com


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Lecture 9 | Programming Methodology (Stanford)


Lecture by Professor Mehran Sahami for the Stanford Computer Science Department (CS106A). Professor Sahami introduces 2 new concepts, and he shows the class how to combine the previous topics and lectures together. CS106A is an Introduction to the engineering of computer applications emphasizing modern software engineering principles: object-oriented design, decomposition, encapsulation, abstraction, and testing. Uses the Java programming language. Emphasis is on good programming style and the built-in facilities of the Java language. Complete Playlist for the Course: www.youtube.com CS106A at Stanford Unversity: www.stanford.edu Stanford Center for Professional Development: scpd.stanford.edu Stanford University: www.stanford.edu Stanford University Channel on YouTube www.youtube.com


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Bernstein at Harvard


Leonard Bernstein lecturing on musical semantics at Harvard. From 'The Unanswered Question' Norton Lectures. The piece he's playing is Beethoven Sonata No. 18 in Eb, Op. 31, No. 3, 1st mvt.


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Funny Physics Lecturer


from california institute of technology. there are 3 parts from 3 different lectures which i cut out, hilarious, i wish lecturers in my sch were as humorous, the first part is a lecture on Maxwell's Equations, second one is on Resonance and the last one is on Static Electricity (electric field).


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Lecture 15 | Programming Methodology (Stanford)


Lecture by Professor Mehran Sahami for the Stanford Computer Science Department (CS106A). Professor Sahami recaps on pointers and memory. He then lectures on reading files, creating files, and over writing files. CS106A is an Introduction to the engineering of computer applications emphasizing modern software engineering principles: object-oriented design, decomposition, encapsulation, abstraction, and testing. Uses the Java programming language. Emphasis is on good programming style and the built-in facilities of the Java language. Complete Playlist for the Course: www.youtube.com CS106A at Stanford Unversity: www.stanford.edu Stanford Center for Professional Development: scpd.stanford.edu Stanford University: www.stanford.edu Stanford University Channel on YouTube www.youtube.com


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Lecture 10 | Programming Methodology (Stanford)


Lecture by Professor Mehran Sahami for the Stanford Computer Science Department (CS106A). Professor Sahami lectures on classes, constructors, instance variables, setters, strings, extending, interface, labels, and GArcs CS106A is an Introduction to the engineering of computer applications emphasizing modern software engineering principles: object-oriented design, decomposition, encapsulation, abstraction, and testing. Uses the Java programming language. Emphasis is on good programming style and the built-in facilities of the Java language. Complete Playlist for the Course: www.youtube.com CS106A at Stanford Unversity: www.stanford.edu Stanford Center for Professional Development: scpd.stanford.edu Stanford University: www.stanford.edu Stanford University Channel on YouTube www.youtube.com


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Lecture 1A | MIT 6.001 Structure and Interpretation, 1986


Overview and Introduction to Lisp Despite the copyright notice on the screen, this course is now offered under a Creative Commons license: BY-NC-SA. Details at ocw.mit.edu Subtitles for this course are provided through the generous assistance of Henry Baker, Hoofar Pourzand, Heather Wood, Aleksejs Truhans, Steven Edwards, George Menhorn, and Mahendra Kumar.


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Lecture 7 | Machine Learning (Stanford)


Lecture by Professor Andrew Ng for Machine Learning (CS 229) in the Stanford Computer Science department. Professor Ng lectures on optimal margin classifiers, KKT conditions, and SUM duals. This course provides a broad introduction to machine learning and statistical pattern recognition. Topics include supervised learning, unsupervised learning, learning theory, reinforcement learning and adaptive control. Recent applications of machine learning, such as to robotic control, data mining, autonomous navigation, bioinformatics, speech recognition, and text and web data processing are also discussed. Complete Playlist for the Course: www.youtube.com CS 229 Course Website: www.stanford.edu Stanford University: www.stanford.edu Stanford University Channel on YouTube: www.youtube.com


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Lecture 1 | Programming Abstractions (Stanford)


The first lecture by Julie Zelenski for the Programming Abstractions Course (CS106B) in the Stanford Computer Science Department. Julie Zelenski gives an introduction to the course, recursion, algorithms, dynamic data structures and data abstraction; she also introduced the significance of programming and gives her opinion of what makes 106B "great;" C++ is introduced, too. Complete Playlist for the Course: www.youtube.com CS 106B Course Website: cs106b.stanford.edu Stanford Center for Professional Development scpd.stanford.edu Stanford University: www.stanford.edu Stanford University Channel on YouTube: www.youtube.com


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Stockhausen on 'sounds', 1972


Excerpt from Karlheinz Stockausen's May 1972 lecture to the Oxford Union on 'Four Criteria of Electronic Music'. It proved to be astonshingly priescent. If you like this, get the whole lecture from Stockhausen-Verlang. www.stockhausen.org


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Lecture 1: Higher Computing - Richard Buckland UNSW 2008


Richard Buckland teaches Higher Computing at UNSW - The University of New South Wales.


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Lecture Part 1 of 9


Part 1: Introduction; Background; Suburban sprawl patterns; the four major components; public realm/private realm


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