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Well, what excites me is that elsewhere on that site they have coursework for all kinds of things. But there's also video lectures and notes and etc for calculus, which for a while now I've had the nagging realization I should try to learn. Linear algebra, yeah, whatever; but the rest is gold. And the premise of the entire project is beautiful.
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MIT decided to put this stuff online as a community resource a year or two ago. Learn all you want for free, it doesn't cost them much. They don't have any trouble filling all the slots they have, with students paying big bucks to get the sheepskin to go with the knowledge.
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Will: ... And Two, you dropped a hundred and fifty grand on a fuckin education you coulda got for a dollah fifty in late chahges at the public library
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Expensive College == Better Education?
Bookmarked. One thing I love about this board, is I never know what to expect when I get here - it seems to cover a little bit of everything! (I just spent some time relaxing reading the "Nut House" thread for some needed comic relief. :rolleyes:
It's been a while since I've been in college (back then books were only $15 - 20 (used but in good shape). One comment on linear algebra - In my EE program, of course we have to take a lot of math classes - 3 semesters of Calculus, Applied differential equations, etc. So one summer I thought I'd take the Linear Algebra class, because with all the other math classes, I could then get a minor in mathematics as well. It sounded like an easy class- but it was pure hell. All of the math classes I took up to that point, I could characterize as "shake 'n bake" that is, you learn a math definition, you get a problem, stick it in, and out pops the answer... pick 'n shovel work. Linear Algebra, on the other hand, you actually have to think - learn about vector spaces, what a "basis" is, proofs, eigenvalues, and so on. It took a lot of thinking on my part. Sadly, I have never had to use any of this at work or anywhere else. I'll be watching the rest of the videos, mainly out of curiosity, why some students pay big big bucks to attend MIT, as opposed to a smaller and less expensive college (as I did) to learn the same thing. Quote:
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Right on, Glatt. ^^^^^^^
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Duly noted. There is an intangible value to attending a high profile university, such as MIT. BTW, when I was leaving the service, I traveled to MIT to check it out as I was selecting a university to attend. Back in '81 they told me the tuition was around $13K per year. I thought at that time I could never afford that of my GI education grant.
Spent the weekend there tho, talking to the students. I remember this one corridor, the students called it the "infinite" corridor, as it was so long. Probably long gone by now. Quote:
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And the classrooms are just giving them tools, the real action is going on in the labs. Both required work, and trying to work out hare brained schemes the students dream up.
Quite often they're working on ideas a collaboration of 2, 3 or 4 students hashed out over pizza & beer, then brought the table cloth/place mats to the lab. MIT owns thousands of patents, and spins off dozens of companies, so many the labs are self supporting. |
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Right now I'm taking continuum mechanics, which is basically just applied linear algebra. :greenface |
OK, here's another field that defies understanding by this common man...
NY Times Quantum Computing Reaches for True Power Quote:
For me, I need "real world" images to make any sense at all out of anything beyond Algebra 101, but Wikipedia comes pretty close. Quote:
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That sounds like every byte would need two locations, one to hold the information, and a second sacrificial location to read the first location.
But if the sacrificial location is destroyed by reading it, then it could only be read once. If it can only be read once, how does the computer search for shit in memory, without destroying everything it's not looking for? curiouser and curiouser. |
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Scientists learn physics behind how cats drink water without getting wet Something as complex as a cat drinking water doesn't get unraveled and turned into a paper at the nation's top science journal overnight. It was almost four years ago that Roman Stocker, an associate professor at MIT's Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, became interested in how his cat, Cutta Cutta (or "Stars Stars" in the Australian aboriginal language), drank. His enthusiasm spread to Aristoff, Sunghwan Jung, now an engineer at Virginia Tech, and Pedro Reis, a physicist who works on the mechanism of soft solids at MIT. |
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ETA - the cats drinking is worth studying. 30 years ago someone spent years figuring out how lobster eye-stalks work. 10 years later the discovery was used to create a new way of etching electronic circuit boards, or something like that, and is earning millions. Never know where these things might lead. |
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