Introduction to Artificial Intelligence - Evolutionary Computing
This lecture forms part of the "Evolutionary Computing" topic in the Introduction to Artificial Intelligence module.
Introduction to Artificial Intelligence - Neural Networks
This lecture forms part of the "Neural Networks" topic in the Introduction to Artificial Intelligence module.
Web Design and Objects - Introduction
This lecture forms part of the "Introduction" topic in the Web Design and Objects module.
9.67 Object and Face Recognition (MIT)
Provides a comprehensive introduction to key issues and findings in object recognition in experimental, neural, computational, and applied domains. Emphasizes the problem of representation, exploring the issue of how 3-D objects should be encoded so as to efficiently recognize them from 2-D images. Second half focuses on face recognition, an ecologically important instance of the general object recognition problem. Describes experimental studies of human face recognition performance and recent a
Usually Submerged, but Revealed Occasionally
Description not set
5.12 Organic Chemistry I (MIT)
5.12 is an introduction to organic chemistry, focusing primarily on the basic principles to understand the structure and reactivity of organic molecules. Emphasis is on substitution and elimination reactions and chemistry of the carbonyl group. The course also provides an introduction to the chemistry of aromatic compounds.
More on Dreamweaver
This set of video tutorials follows on from 'Introduction to Dreamweaver CS3'. It focuses on more advanced features and techniques.
4.651 20th Century Art (MIT)
Critical examination of major developments in European and American art during the past century. Surveys art's engagements with modernization, radical politics, utopianism, mass culture, changing conceptions of mind and human nature, new technologies, colonialism and postcolonialism, and other significant aspects of recent history.
6.826 Principles of Computer Systems (MIT)
6.826 provides an introduction to the basic principles of computer systems, with emphasis on the use of rigorous techniques as an aid to understanding and building modern computing systems. Particular attention is paid to concurrent and distributed systems. Topics covered include: specification and verification, concurrent algorithms, synchronization, naming, networking, replication techniques (including distributed cache management), and principles and algorithms for achieving reliability.
6.441 Transmission of Information (MIT)
6.441 offers an introduction to the quantitative theory of information and its applications to reliable, efficient communication systems. Topics include: mathematical definition and properties of information; source coding theorem, lossless compression of data, optimal lossless coding; noisy communication channels, channel coding theorem, the source-channel separation theorem, multiple access channels, broadcast channels, Gaussian noise, and time-varying channels.
21L.015 Introduction to Media Studies (MIT)
Introduction to Media Studies is designed for students who have grown up in a rapidly changing global multimedia environment and want to become more literate and critical consumers and producers of culture. Through an interdisciplinary comparative and historical lens, the course defines "media" broadly as including oral, print, theatrical, photographic, broadcast, cinematic, and digital cultural forms and practices. The course looks at the nature of mediated communication, the functions of media
11.948 Power of Place: Media Technology, Youth, and City Design and Development (MIT)
This workshop provides an introduction to urban environmental design and explores the potential of information technology and the Internet to transform public education, city design, and community development in inner-city neighborhoods. Integration of comprehensive ("top-down") and grassroots ("bottom-up") approaches to design and planning is a major theme.
Students will work in a real neighborhood with real people on a real project, putting theory into practice and reflecting on insights gain
How Individual Rights Transformed World Politics
Have individual rights transformed world politics? Prof. Reus-Smit challenges the circumscribed nature of this debate, arguing the relationship between individual rights and world politics has a longer history and is more fundamental than it suggests. Have individual rights transformed world politics? Debate on this question has focused to date on the efficacy, or lack thereof, of the international human rights regime. Prof. Reus-Smit challenges the circumscribed nature of this debate, arguing t
Introduction to OO Programming in Java - Intro to module and to OO programming
This lecture forms part of the "Intro to module and to OO programming" topic in the Introduction to OO Programming in Java module.
Introduction to Artificial Intelligence - Neural Networks
This reading material forms part of the "Neural Networks" topic in the Introduction to Artificial Intelligence module.
Rapid Application Development - Introduction to Visual Basic for Applications and relationship to VB
This task guide forms part of the "Introduction to Visual Basic for Applications and relationship to VB 6" topic in the Rapid Application Development module
Introduction to OO Programming in Java - Introduction to the AWT
This lecture forms part of the "Introduction to the AWT" topic in the Introduction to OO Programming in Java module.
Introduction to OO Programming in Java - Classes and arithmetic
This reading material forms part of the "Classes and arithmetic" topic in the Introduction to OO Programming in Java module.
Introduction to OO Programming in Java - Classes and arithmetic
This zip file contains a visual aid which forms part of the "Classes and arithmetic" topic in the Introduction to OO Programming in Java module.
Introduction to OO Programming in Java - Classes and arithmetic
This zip file contains a visual aid which forms part of the "Classes and arithmetic" topic in the Introduction to OO Programming in Java module.













