The University of California at Berkeley has joined the ranks of YouTube partners by providing a number of full course lectures and other special events through YouTube. The school announced the ...
Earlier this week, the University of California at Berkeley purged some 20,000 lectures from various academic fields from its YouTube channel following a less-than-sensible ruling from the US ...
Some UC Berkeley professors are choosing to offer their class lectures online and free of charge to the public on platforms such as the UCTV YouTube channel and edX, a website for free online classes.
Going beyond the everyday use of the iPod, some schools and universities are allowing content managed by iTunes U to be viewed online by the general public, reports eSchool News. iTunes U is a free ...
It is the first university to make full course lectures available on YouTube. According to Berkeley officials, it will continue to expand the offering. Topics of study will include bioengineering, ...
When UC Berkeley announced that the fall semester would be virtual, campus computer science professor Dan Garcia transformed his “man cave” basement into a studio in order to make engaging prerecorded ...
Move over "Leave Britney Alone Guy." And all those cute kitten videos, too. The University of California, Berkeley, is posting course lectures and other campus happenings on YouTube. "To a teacher who ...
Just like MIT and various other colleges before it, UC Berkeley’s put a bunch of lectures online to YouTube so you can watch and learn from the comfort of your toilet. Berkeley does have a great ...
UC Berkeley has just announced that they are partnering with Google Video to give you free college courses: The University of California at Berkeley said on Tuesday that it is using Google Video to ...
The University of California, Berkeley, took a dive into the Web 2.0 world with Wednesday’s launch of a program that offers videos of entire course lectures and special events on YouTube to all ...
“What good is a writer if he can’t destroy literature?” The question comes from Julio Cortázar’s landmark 1963 novel Hopscotch, the dense, elusive, streetwise masterpiece that doubles as a High ...