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已有视频或音频的课程
Although video lectures are useful for students, there are many reasons that
MIT OpenCourseWare does not include video lectures in every course. First is the
issue of bandwidth. We are very much focused on making MIT's courses materials
as accessible as possible to users all over the world, including the developing
world. If we were to start depending on the video component as THE key element
of every MIT OCW course, we would be excluding a large portion of the MIT OCW
audience who are still surfing the Web on 28K modems. They would never be able
to download the videos and we are very sensitive to that fact.
Another key concern about video is cost. The technology for compressing and
storing video becomes more and more affordable by the day, but it is still not
affordable, or feasible from a production standpoint, for us to be compressing
20 video lectures for all 1400 of our courses.
A key MIT OCW audience is educators, and for them, we are hoping that by
providing the syllabus, reading lists and lecture notes, we are offering a
chance for them to jumpstart their own pedagogy and improve the way they teach
their chosen discipline. While the video lectures for "Course 18.06:
Linear Algebra ," for example, are very easy for people with fast Internet
connections to watch, they do not really fulfill the mission of MIT OCW.
We do, however, offer complete video and/or audio for the following
courses:
视频课程
3.091
Introduction to Solid State Chemistry, Fall 2004
3.320
Atomistic Computer Modeling of Materials, Spring 2005
3.60
Symmetry, Structure, and Tensor Properties of Materials, Fall 2005
5.111
Principles of Chemical Science, Fall 2005
5.112
Principles of Chemical Science, Fall 2005
6.002
Circuits and Electronics, Fall 2000
6.013
/ ESD.013J Electromagnetics and Applications, Fall 2005
6.033
Computer Systems Engineering, Spring 2005
6.046J
/ 18.410J Introduction to Algorithms (SMA 5503), Fall 2005
6.451
Principles of Digital Communication II, Spring 2005
6.641
Electromagnetic Fields, Forces, and Motion, Spring 2005
6.912
Introduction to Copyright Law, IAP 2006
7.012
Introduction to Biology, Fall 2004
7.014
Introductory Biology, Spring 2005
8.01
Physics I, Fall 1999
8.02
Electricity and Magnetism, Spring 2002
8.03 Physics
III: Vibrations and Waves, Fall 2004
11.969
Workshop on Deliberative Democracy and Dispute Resolution, Summer 2005
16.885J
Aircraft Systems Engineering, Fall 2005
18.03
Differential Equations, Spring 2006
18.06
Linear Algebra, Spring 2005
18.085
Mathematical Methods for Engineers I, Fall 2005
18.086
Mathematical Methods for Engineers II, Spring 2006
CMS.930
Media, Education, and the Marketplace, Fall 2001
音频课程
2.57
Nano-to-Macro Transport Processes, Fall 2004
3.60
Symmetry, Structure, and Tensor Properties of Materials, Fall 2005
5.111
Principles of Chemical Science, Fall 2005
5.112
Principles of Chemical Science, Fall 2005
6.046J
/ 18.410J Introduction to Algorithms (SMA 5503), Fall 2005
6.774
Physics of Microfabrication: Front End Processing, Fall 2004
7.012
Introduction to Biology, Fall 2004
7.013
Introductory Biology, Spring 2005
9.00
Introduction to Psychology, Fall 2004
9.01
Neuroscience and Behavior, Fall 2003
9.14
Brain Structure and its Origins, Spring 2005
9.20
Animal Behavior, Fall 2005
16.885J
Aircraft Systems Engineering, Fall 2005
18.086
Mathematical Methods for Engineers II, Spring 2006
ESD.932
Engineering Ethics, Spring 2006
HST.508
Genomics and Computational Biology, Fall 2002
HST.512
Genomic Medicine, Spring 2004
Technical Requirements
RealOne™ Player software is required to run the .rm files associated
with the courses listed on this page. Media player software, such as Quicktime®
Player, RealOne™ Player, or
Windows Media® Player, is required to run the .mp3 files.
Learn how to save the RealPlayer
video files to a disk or to your hard
drive.