Here is some <a href="http://dev.web.cs.cmu.edu:6666/testReleases<nobr>/<wbr></wbr></nobr> demo/40.html">information</a> about the technology they are using, from <a href="http://www.cmu.edu">Carnegie Mellon University</a>.
Berkeley also netcasts many of their CS classes. I was able to watch them from my non-campus address, but they claim that access is restricted from the berkeley.edu domain. Oh well. <a href="http://media2.bmrc.berkeley.edu/bibs/schedu<nobr>l<wbr></wbr></nobr> e.cfm">Look here.</a>
No, Jon, that was not a study of Sims Users, but a study of the amount of information the Internet carries by the School of Information Management and Systems at Berkeley. Geez, John, you could try actually following the link and backtracking to find the actual source of something....
totalnews.com still exists. Interestingly, instead of displaying the LA Times inside the frame, they open a new window for them. But for most other papers, the ones that didn't complain, their site still opens in the frame.
Berkeley doesn't do that anymore. You have to register now (LIPS and then they let you use it, using a DHCP configuration. To go into the library that has the connections, you have to be a student, or have a drivers' license and be over 18.
Amazingly, UC Berkeley is neither a Coke or Pepsi school. Each department of the university makes their ownract. For instance, the dorms and on campus restaurants picked Coke, but Pepsi is sold at vending machines in the math department and CS building.
Here is some <a href="http://dev.web.cs.cmu.edu:6666/testReleases<nobr>/<wbr></wbr></nobr> demo/40.html">information</a> about the technology they are using, from <a href="http://www.cmu.edu">Carnegie Mellon University</a>.
Berkeley also netcasts many of their CS classes. I was able to watch them from my non-campus address, but they claim that access is restricted from the berkeley.edu domain. Oh well. <a href="http://media2.bmrc.berkeley.edu/bibs/schedu<nobr>l<wbr></wbr></nobr> e.cfm">Look here.</a>
Mills College's program isn't bad.
Penn's program is more of an IT type than a true computer science curriculum, but they have the computer sciency courses too.
No, Jon, that was not a study of Sims Users, but a study of the amount of information the Internet carries by the School of Information Management and Systems at Berkeley. Geez, John, you could try actually following the link and backtracking to find the actual source of something....
Uh, no.
totalnews.com still exists. Interestingly, instead of displaying the LA Times inside the frame, they open a new window for them. But for most other papers, the ones that didn't complain, their site still opens in the frame.
A column by Daily Breeze writer John Bogert."It's Stalag 18 with ideals by Locke and Jefferson."
See this link for an update.
See http://vitalviewer.com/files/impsites.ht ml. Apparently, VitalSource will be concentrating on the health sciences for their textbook system.
Berkeley doesn't do that anymore. You have to register now (LIPS and then they let you use it, using a DHCP configuration. To go into the library that has the connections, you have to be a student, or have a drivers' license and be over 18.
Amazingly, UC Berkeley is neither a Coke or Pepsi school. Each department of the university makes their ownract. For instance, the dorms and on campus restaurants picked Coke, but Pepsi is sold at vending machines in the math department and CS building.