Thursday May 19, 2011
Video introduction to Chrome dev tools, lot of enhancements to style manipulation, timeline inspection, script debugging, DOM and Event listener breakpoints.
Saturday March 19, 2011
This track provides the developers and code ninjas tasked with improving latency and building scalable web sites that deliver content, streaming media, and more on multiple platforms.
Thursday February 24, 2011
During the summer of 2007, Gödel, Escher, Bach was recorded especially for OpenCourseWare
Wednesday February 23, 2011
"Cryptography is hard. It usually takes many years of study before it is possible to make any serious contribution to the field; and even expert cryptographers often have flaws discovered in their work.
However, merely using cryptography requires far less expertise. In this talk, I will cover everything most software developers will ever need to know about cryptography -- starting from the very beginning -- along with (time allowing) some of the reasons behind the recommendations I provide."
Sunday December 5, 2010
"In 1992, Sun Microsystems launched a project at in an effort to both predict and guide the future of computing. It drew together the talents of more than 100 engineers, designers, futurists, and filmakers. The output of this effort was Starfire, the Movie, showing a day in the life of a knowledge worker in the far-off distant year, 2004. In March 2009, Popular Science Magazine reported on a new video Microsoft had just released showing life in the year 2019: 'The 2019 Microsoft details with this video is almost identical to the 2004 predicted in this video produced by Sun Microsystems in 1992.'"
A discussion about technology, culture, the Creative Commons and the media with regards to disaster areas and warzones. Jacob Appelbaum traveled from Turkey into Iraq in April of 2005. He documented his trip with a focus on photography, blogging and video interviewing. After hurricane Katrina, he traveled into Houston, Baton Rouge and finally New Orleans.
Wednesday November 3, 2010
"How much does an average engineer know about the history of the place he/she works in—Silicon Valley? Come and test your knowledge. Silicon Valley entrepreneur and professor Steve Blank will talk about how World War II set the stage for the creation and explosive growth of Silicon Valley, and the role of Frederick Terman and Stanford in working with government agencies (including the CIA and the National Security Agency) to set up companies in this area that sparked the creation of hundreds of other enterprises"