Stanford Classes Now Available on iTunes 274
Chowser writes "Forbes is reporting Stanford University is now offering a wide range of content on iTunes. From the article: 'In an unprecedented move, Stanford University is collaborating with Apple Computer to allow public access a wide range of lectures, speeches, debates and other university content through iTunes. No need to pay the $31,200 tuition. No need to live on campus. No need even to be a student. The nearly 500 tracks that constitute "Stanford on iTunes" are available to anyone willing to spend the few minutes it takes to download them from the Internet.'" Talaper noted the Official Apple Page on the program is up as well.
cheap degrees @ home (Score:5, Funny)
Free as in beer? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Free as in beer? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Free as in beer? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Free as in beer? (Score:3, Funny)
Hey buddy, I think you're doing it wrong.
Re:cheap degrees @ home (Score:5, Interesting)
99 cents per lecture, get your ONLINE degree from iTunes today
Not quite. The downside is these are a on-sided, read only participation of the material, which in my experience isn't quite as good as having it followed by a good old fashion Q & A session.
Also, the sheepskin from Stanford comes only with that Tuition deal. I don't think you'd get very far trying to set up your own school with them either, i.e. Bob University (based upon actual Stanford materials, but with our EZ-Pass exams!)
Re:cheap degrees @ home (Score:5, Funny)
Hey, you can get the real exams too! You just need to get access to a fraternity/sorority's word file...
Re:cheap degrees @ home (Score:2)
I agree. But for those of us who can't afford Stanford, or for some other reason can't go, this would be a great way to augment the education we are getting somewhere else... or to serve as refresher for courses taken years ago.
I personally can't wait to start listening to some of this material.
spam degree? (Score:2)
"No need to be a student" is overstating it (Score:5, Informative)
Re:"No need to be a student" is overstating it (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:"No need to be a student" is overstating it (Score:2, Funny)
Huh? (Score:3, Funny)
(I don't think anybody was seriously looking at iTunes as a rival to the UK's Open University program, where they've been doing remote broadcasts of lectures for a long time now.)
Re:"No need to be a student" is overstating it (Score:2)
Actually, some of the more interesting stuff is in the "Hear on campus" section... places like Stanford often have cool guest speakers and ( sometimes ) interesting round-table discussion events. The Dali Lama stuff is pretty interesting.
Of course, this isn't "new". This launched sometime last year.
MIT OpenCourseWare (Score:5, Interesting)
Without the diploma... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Without the diploma... (Score:2)
No, it just means the education is what you make of it. While you don't have "proof" of your understanding of the concepts you can leverage the information on a personal level. (eg Steve Jobs "dropping in" to calligraphy class)
Re:Without the diploma... (Score:2, Interesting)
I know, for myself at least, that those notes often provide additional insight or alternate approaches to material I've studied, and are helpfu
Learning and Education (Score:3, Insightful)
Holy generalizations. And bad ones at that. (a state of what?)
No longer do people pursue degrees for the love of the subject, they just want a nice piece of paper to wave in front of possible employers.
The point of college *is* to make yourself more employable.
It's a shame that for many personal achievement is now a distant second to what other people think of the letters after your name.
I'm proud of
Re:Learning and Education (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Learning and Education (Score:2, Interesting)
It is stupid to take an interactive medium and remove the ability to communicate back. Its like making telephones with only an earpiece.
Re:Learning and Education (Score:2, Insightful)
And a telephone with only an earpiece is called a radio.
Definitely won't detract (Score:5, Interesting)
It's a good thing for them because it builds their image. It shows an interest in promotion education in general and sharing knowledge with those who cannot afford the $30K+. It also gives prospective students a chance to see what that money would be going for before they shell it out. So really all around a good thing for them.
Finishing touch (Score:5, Funny)
If I downloaded everything they made, and studied it thoroughly, I might have a strong grasp of the subject matter but I still wouldn't have a degree from MIT or Stanford.
Re:Definitely won't detract (Score:2)
Re:MIT OpenCourseWare (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:MIT OpenCourseWare (Score:2)
re: evaulation of candidates (Score:2)
Re:Mod Parent UP! Personal Story... (Score:2)
I personally made a very foolish mistake in college by attending a less prestigious school over a much more prestigious one.
I paid my way through university. At the time I was furious that they were teaching me things I had learned in community college. Same text books, similar lectures, only the professors would blather on about their research which had little to do with the subject of the day.
So I left. I felt I got a better education, but boy it doesn't show on paper
Re:MIT OpenCourseWare (Score:2)
I think employers understand that the work skills required to complete a four-year degree program at a well-regarded university are at least as important as indicators of qualifications as a person's ability to leave a positive i
Re:MIT OpenCourseWare (Score:2)
Re:MIT OpenCourseWare (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:MIT OpenCourseWare (Score:2)
Re:MIT OpenCourseWare (Score:2)
MIT OpenCourseWare is open to anyone, anywhere. Some of the MIT courses have been translated into Español, Portugues, and Simplified Chinese.
This is impressive (Score:5, Interesting)
Also consider that Stanford is a private university, not public.
Meanwhile the Vatican is defending copyrighting the Pope's pronouncements. Which, IMHO, is right up there with copyright of MLK's 'I Have A Dream' and Co$'s copyrighted "Trade Secrets"
Nice move ya floppy tree :-)
Re:This is impressive - Converting the Masses (Score:2)
Sounds like an excellent way to keep both these "church's" pronouncements from spreading more quickly than they would otherwise.
And all along I'd been thinking that the whole point of a church was to convert as many people to your cause as possible because the world will be so much better once that happens. And yes, MLK w
Re:This is impressive (Score:5, Funny)
Bah! Who needs the Pope. If god wants to talk to me, he'll send a flaming shrubbery. A nice one. But not too expensive.
Holy DRM, Batman! (Score:5, Funny)
The whole tree of knowledge debacle was all about this.
God is all like "No distribution of my IP".
Then the Snake is all like "I haves the 0-day".
And then Eve is all like "Adam, dude, here's a torrent".
Adam to Eve "No way, God will totally rootkit our ass".
Eve back to Adam "Chillax, guy".
Then Adam is like "K".
And God totally kickbans them from the server.
Re:This is impressive (Score:3)
Re:This is impressive (Score:3, Insightful)
Not in the Vatican, it's not.
Yes it is. If the people there consent to be ruled by their government, then what is the problem? It is up to them to say what they can and cannot do, not any of us.
University of Wisconsin, others also (Score:5, Informative)
Second, this is also available at the University of Wisconsin - Madison [wisc.edu], as well as other schools, such as UC Berkeley [berkeley.edu].
What's actually "new" here is that Apple has productized this service for educational institutions in the form of iTunes U [apple.com], announced yesterday.
Though those who haven't heard of it before may be interested in Steve Jobs' 2005 commencement address at Stanford [apple.com].
Please note that iTunes U operates on a different server (deimos.apple.com) than the normal music store (phobos.apple.com).
Little more education for you... (Score:2, Informative)
Demios and Phobos are the moons of Mars (Terror and Fear, respectively)
Slowpokes (Score:2)
The biggest differences seem to be that a lot of the iTunes material is audio only, is not examinable material, but is available on the Internet. (There would be nothing to stop the BBC from simulcasting the OU materi
Re:University of Wisconsin, others also (Score:2)
Actually, it's been around a lot longer than that, I'm told. The national press was slow to pick up on the story.
Six schools in total at rollout (Score:3, Interesting)
Over the past year, Apple has worked with six institutions to test the service: Brown, Duke, and Stanford Universities; the University of Michigan School of Dentistry, at Ann Arbor; the University of Missouri School of Journalism, at Columbia; and the University of Wisconsin at Madison.
Universities also have the option of integrating the with local directory and authentication systems, requiring users to authenticate before use.
Now you tell me (Score:5, Funny)
Harvard Extension (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Harvard Extension (Score:5, Funny)
You misspelled "hangovers" and "parties"
Re:Harvard Extension (Score:2, Interesting)
Commoditizing teachers (Score:5, Interesting)
I would like to see this lead to a fairly nice public education model where online universities that are publicly subsidized allow students to take classes for free, and then the student pays for the teacher's time when he/she needs that extra help.
Re:Commoditizing teachers (Score:2, Insightful)
GoogleUni to open up!!! (Score:2)
Google automates a fully K1-12 class with 3d avatar teachers and using traditional reading, you cannot (C) knowledge so it wouldnt
be hard to hire 4 teachers per grade level and computerize the whole class texts/tests. English grammer/exams would be more difficult though
even that is 50% A/B/C/D type questions. Think americas army game medical tutor.
Classes on iTunes (Score:2, Funny)
I listened to some this morning (Score:5, Interesting)
The music? Well...I liked it, but sorry Stanford - it's mostly very derivative and most bands seem to be directly pretending to be another cmmercial one. What happened to colleges doing new forms of music and experimental stuff?
Cheers,
Ian
"Now, as you can see in this equation" (Score:5, Insightful)
A good project: develop an open-source way to transmit and store presentations in a useful and navigatable form. Lectures need three streams - the audio, the presenter's face, and the graphics. The graphics need to be at much higher resolution, and should be sent as clean still images when possible. One output should be a web page, with thumbnails for the graphics and clickable audio segments. Then you can find something in the lecture when you need it.
The presentation should be run through a voice recognition system, to make the voice searchable. It doesn't have to be perfect, just good enough for search. Similarly, OCR the graphics and pull keywords from them.
Re:"Now, as you can see in this equation" (Score:2)
Got it! It's called TV.
Re:"Now, as you can see in this equation" (Score:2)
http://www.seminars.apple.com/seminarsonline/inde
There's a video panel, and presentation slide panel. There's also a table of contents (in some of the webinars) that allows you to skip to certain sections of the presentation.
There's no voice recognition or OCR though.
Further proof (Score:2, Insightful)
It's always the extras that get you (Score:2)
Text books extra?
I'm reminded of Good Will Hunting (Score:5, Funny)
Even Easier (Score:3, Informative)
They usually have quizes and homework posted along with solutions, and rarely have any passwords to get the information. I also can sometimes download blackboard screenshots, lecture notes, and even recordings of lectures. Sure beats sitting in class. And since I already run a company I dont need a peice of paper that says I am smart, so there is no need to go to college again.
I guess if I ever decided to do some kind of research I could go back to college and actually finish this time, but I am in no hurry.
--
Once in a while you can get shown the light (Score:3, Funny)
Funny, that's exactly the way I felt about college when I went on tour with the Grateful Dead.
tuition (Score:2)
I go to a public school, and it's almost that much. Most of the privates are somewhere in the high 40s. The cost of education in America today is appaling especially if you're from a state that lacks a decent higher-education system.
False. Mod parent down. (Score:2)
Perhaps you mean tuition PLUS room and board? Yes, then you're getting into the low $40's; but in general you can avoid that after your freshman year in most colleges by living off-campus.
Re:tuition (Score:2)
Total cost, when you figure in room, board, living expenses, textbooks, etc, is in the $40k range, but tuition hasn't made it up there yet.
Available in Europe? (Score:2, Interesting)
Get rich quick! (Score:2)
Re:Get rich quick! (Score:2)
What?!?! Someone at an allegedly-elite American university criticizing America, particularly its foreign policy, and when there is a Republican in the White House, no less? Why, you'll be claiming Hitler was a racist, next!
a clue (Score:2)
You pay for credentials, not education (Score:3, Insightful)
Carleton does this... (Score:2)
Stanford on iTunes (Score:5, Informative)
And as for the free content for UC Berkeley courses, we have only 100-level (or lower) classes which are basically prerequisites for a UC Berkeley education. I'm sorry to say that if you were looking for course content, you'll need to look elsewhere.
So this leaves MIT, which actually does have a lot of content (although it depends on what is put up by the professor), like this page [mit.edu] if you are interested in Computer Language Engineering (upper-level, apparently).
Law School Courses Available (Score:5, Interesting)
I've been recreating my law school lectures at the University of Cincinnati (where I am a first-year student focusing on copyright and technology law). Instead of recording the raw lecture audio, and dealing with the copyright and privacy concerns, I've been taking detailed notes, adding my own analysis, and capturing new creative expression. (Yes there are still some copyright issues, but my lawyer and I are in agreement that what I am doing does fall under Fair Use.) This new creative expression is then placed under CC-Attribution and the GNU FDL so others can do new and innovative things with it.
I recorded roughly one 15-20 minute episode per lecture, with about 40 lectures in each of my four substantive classes.
My episodes are available for manual download and in podcast format through the iTunes Music Store (search for "Life of a Law Student"). This semester I have recruited some additional students to come on board. This way we can expand to other law schools and to undergraduate law / political science courses.
Here is the site [lifeofalawstudent.com], and I am still looking for students to help. Additionally, if you have technology skills (this is Slashdot after all), I need volunteers as we revamp our back-end software and deal with an influx of new material.
Contact me [lifeofalawstudent.com] if you are interested in being a part of this.
- Neil Wehneman
P.S. For those who are wondering if my "re-lectures" are credible, I scored a 3.77 GPA last semester. Although I don't get my class rank for a few more days, I've been told by the administration that this should land me in the top 10% of the class.
Creative Commons Lectures (Score:2, Interesting)
Stanford lectures good, UCLA lectures bad? (Score:2)
Education isn't about education (Score:2, Insightful)
I wish Berkeley could learn from MIT (Score:2)
obvious question (Score:2)
Re:good deal (Score:5, Interesting)
Sounds like a great idea!
Sounds like a nice counterpart to MIT's OpenCourseWare.
Unfortunately not... MIT's OpenCourseWare [mit.edu] is well... Open.
Stanford on iTunes however requires an expensive piece of software (OS X or Windows) to use it.
I don't have a Mac, I don't run Windows - how am I supposed to access this?
I guess this what you can expect from a University that puts a 1 page FAQ [stanford.edu] in a PDF (why dear god, why?)
Good for some people I acknowledge, but no OpenCourseWare.
Re:good deal (Score:2, Interesting)
I applaud Stanford's effort. It is not easy to come up with a mass distribution scheme that will be easily accessible to the vast majority of people. I'm sure MIT's program is great but this is the first I've heard of it. With Stanford's programs on iTunes, I would bet they would be far more accessible to the broader public.
I'm all for open source, stick it to th
Re:good deal (Score:3, Interesting)
Add that you can only stream most (all?) of the content and not download it.. well, it sort of limits the usefulness, doesn't it?
iTunes on Linux... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Non iTunes Availability? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Non iTunes Availability? (Score:2)
Except that you don't need to own an iPod, by any stretch of the imagination. So your actual statement is:
Way to alienate those of us who refuse to use their iTunes software.
Fair enough. Though I doubt they're too worried about alienating the 1% of people who somehow feel morally obligated to not download a free piece of software. Now, people who don't use Windows or OS X, and thus can't use iTu
MP3 unavailability (Score:2, Informative)
That's the salient point the parent poster is making.
Re:Non iTunes Availability? (Score:2)
Re:Pretty Useless (Score:5, Insightful)
The commoditization of education as your (+3 Informative!) comment implies is one of the larger factors [in my opinion] in the steady decline of the US as a knowledge leader.
Re:Pretty Useless (Score:2)
Re:Pretty Useless (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Pretty Useless (Score:2, Interesting)
So are "Ideas" on CBC Radio 2 & alt.binaries.sounds.radio.misc
Re:Pretty Useless (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Pretty Useless (Score:2)
No, the reason you pay that $30k tuition is to get the student ID card, which lets you into the good parties. Duh.
Re:a solution to a problem that doesn't exist (Score:2)
Re:a solution to a problem that doesn't exist (Score:4, Insightful)
Well, these are hosted on Apple's domain. So Stanford isn't storing the content or paying for the bandwidth.
this is almost forcing college kids to go out and buy apple compliant hardware if implemented on a mass scale
How so ? You can access the iTMS from a Windows PC or an Apple PC and I'm pretty sure there are hacks to get at it from Linux, though those are unsupported... what hardware do you have to buy ? You don't need an iPod to listen to these, and they're easily transcoded into MP3s; they aren't copy-protected, and you could transcode them even if they were FairPlay DRM'd.
Why not just have directories of MP3s ? There's a fine question. I think the answer is probably because Apple is offering this service for free, and most users will find it easier to use than a directory of MP3s. It's great, serious, sneaky hardcore marketing, but you're making it out to be evil... which I'm not sure it is.
I feel like I just responded to a troll... is the lack of Linux/Unix iTMS client support what's bugging you about this? Because I think that's probably the only justifiable complaint a person could have- otherwise, this is very, very cool.
Re:Explain to me... (Score:2)
I'm pretty certain demios.apple.com is not a Stanford server. I'm also pretty sure Stanford isn't paying for this service...
In short, they did it right, but they also did it so you can't get to it from iTMS proper... you woul
Re:Explain to me... (Score:2)
you wouldn't really want this conent popping up in an iTMS search I don't think.
Fail to see the issue, sorry. As it is, there is already Stanford content proper on iTMS, as well as routine citizen podcasts covering similar content down the line. As for private, well, sure, in that case, SUID away, same as any other controlled content.
Again, having it on iTMS would just seem to make more sense, after all, the trust is towards
Re:Explain to me... (Score:2)
Fascinating, and disturbing... China blocks Stanford, but not slashdot or iTMS ? Why don't the folks in power realize how dumb that is and how unbelievably both incompetent and morally irrehensible it shows them to be ? I suppose that's a different discussion.
In any event, then, it seems I mayb have done you a favor. Plug the following URL into your browser :
https://deimos.apple.com/WebObjects/ITCSBrowse.wo a /wa/Browse?destinati [apple.com]
Re:How is this free, again? (Score:2)
Re:college is obsolete (Score:3, Insightful)
An example: Computer Science. Sure you can teach yourself to program, nothing terribly difficult about programming. In fact many of us were doing it as soon as we could reach a keyboard. This however does not teach you other concepts. What a state machine
Re:college is obsolete (Score:2)