Mixing in Mono and Using Counterpoint - Music Production
Learn more about Dan's Critical Listening course at: http://bit.ly/ymt7zw
Dan Thompson is an independent writer/producer and recording engineer, his credits include work on records, feature films, and television series and movies, including ER, The Sopranos, Swimfan, The Sweetest Thing, Melrose Place, Malibu Shores, Sabrina the Teenage Witch, Touched By An Angel, Soul Food and NCIS, to name just a few. Dan has authored articles on music technology for EQ and Electronic Musician, has been a pres
Chris Crawford Lecture.mov
Chris Crawford lecture,
Fundamentals of Interactivity
sponsored by Creative Industries
March 30, 2012
Behavior will change: Fuel prices rise as consumers demand more
Rising gas prices have become an all-too-familiar fact of life for drivers, and there's really no end in sight...unless consumers make the change.
That's according to Kenneth Casavant, professor of economic sciences and director of the Freight Policy Transportation Institute at Washington State University.
For more about this story, click here:
31. The Two Ozone Problems
The Atmosphere, the Ocean and Environmental Change (GG 140)
There are two ozone problems in the atmosphere. Tropospheric ozone in the form of photochemical smog is sometimes dangerously high whereas stratospheric ozone concentration is sometimes dangerously low. Photochemical smog is created through chemical reactions between UV radiation from the run and nitrogen oxides that are emitted from automobiles. High concentrations of tropospheric ozone are dangerous because of the damage ozone can
The First Stage of the Battle of Stalingrad in 1942
In this video clip, from Indigo Film, learn more about how a tactical mistake had caused the German Army the element of surprise on the Battle of Stalingrad. (8:25)
Demand and Supply, Consumer Goods, Prices and Exchange Labor and Unions De Olympische winterspelen : Ontstaan, disciplines Je vindt in deze presentatie informatie over de Olympische winterspelen, het ontstaan van de Olympische spelen en de disciplines van de winterspelen. Ex Cathedra : Het leren zoals het was Is er een verschil tussen het studentenleven nu en dat van pakweg 300 jaar geleden? Wat leerden de studenten zoal aan de universiteit? Hoe verliepen de examens? Waarom verbleven de jongste studenten in een pedagogie? Was er veel wedijver tussen de … Spark : Praten met kinderen met autisme Via deze website is het mogelijk om met kinderen met autisme te communiceren. Op eenvoudige vragen kan aan de hand van foto's een antwoord worden gegeven. De site heeft nu reeds meer dan 6000 van die vragen met afbeeldingen beschikbaar. … 信号処理特論 Issues in Survey Research Design Snow Cover by Latitude If the Public Would be Outraged by Their Rulings, Should Judges Care? Candle flame Multiplying Rationals - Problem 4 of 4 Antarctic Penguins Cartooning: Drawing a Shark 9. Virtue and Habit I Narrowing the Search for Dark Matter
The first in a series of eight lectures. [52:51]
The fifth in a series of eight lectures. [51:35]


Realization of FIR and IIR systems and parasitic effects, robust digital filters, multirate signal processing(sampling rate alteration), filter banks, wavelets, adaptive filters, digital signal processors, etc.
Leads participants through the process of designing their own survey. Examines the major decisions faced by a health researcher who wants to design and implement a survey. Explores the potential sources of bias associated with alternative approaches to sample design, respondent recruitment, data collection methods (interviews in-person or by telephone, computer assisted interviews, or mail surveys) instrument design, and field administration. Participants prepare a defensible proposal for a surv
Using data sets from MYNASADATA students will create graphs comparing the amount (percentage) of snow cover along selected latitudes by date.
A Report and Analysis of the 2007 Annual Lecture in Law and Society delivered by Professor Cass Sunstein, organised by the Foundation for Law, Justice and Society in association with the Law Faculty, Oxford. It is clear that judicial rulings can, and sometimes do, provoke public outrage. A significant body of literature in political science seeks to demonstrate the extent to which courts sometimes work to reduce the likelihood and intensity of such outrage. The normative question of whether judg
Your skin covers and protects your body. Your skin can also detect heat and cold. If you put one of your fingers in the flame of a candle, your brain would gather this information and send a message to your muscles to move your finger out of the flame. This is because the brain receives a signal that the flame is extremely hot and in turn the brain tells your body you are in pain and that you should move your finger.
This video is a continuation and provides a more challenging example that demonstrates how to divide rational functions and simplify the answer. This example involves functions that have trinomials in the numerator and denominator with leading coefficients that are greater than one. (5:17)
In this video, a group of scientists heads to Antarctica to study fledgling penguins. They take measurements including size and weight to form a history of some animals.
Key vocabulary words include: Penguins, Animals, Science, Antarctica, Antarctic
Watch this video to learn to draw a cartoon shark. Detailed, step-by-step directions are demonstrated. The cartoonist explains how to stylize features when creating cartoons.
Philosophy and the Science of Human Nature (PHIL 181)
We become virtuous by acting as if we are virtuous. This central insight of Aristotle is explored in this lecture. Professor Gendler begins by explaining how Aristotle's method can allow us to turn normative laws - which describe how we should act -- into descriptive laws -- which describe how we do act. But what practical strategies are available to help us turn our reflective behavior (acting as if virtuous) into automatic behavior (being
Scientists have further narrowed the search for a hypothetical particle that could be dark matter, the mysterious stuff that makes up 80 percent of all the mass in the universe. This video from NASA Astrophysics presents the new results, compiled from two years' worth of data from NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. (03:03)













