Free Education (x)
MIT OpenCourseWare
There really is no such thing as free education - but with the right connection (read: internet) you can actually do some self study in one of the best university in the US - the Massachusets Institure of Technology, or more commonly referred to as MIT.
The OpenCourseWare (http://ocw.mit.edu) provides online material for courses that is freely available to the public. They have some simple text based courses (for those with low bandwith) and some with multi-media enhanced material using streaming video etc. etc. - Seriously, I'd love to quote the write up in the site but I don't have the patience to read their legal terms blah(2x) and am not sure if I am allowed to quote from their site... but am pretty sure they do -- with certain restrictions of course.
Here is a listing of the Departments that offers their courses online.
On a side note, am right now brushing up in CS and Foreign Languages. Too bad they don't have astrology otherwise I'd be signing up so I can predict my success....
I stumbled upon this valuable bit of information while watching cnn.com (in between the daily entertainment about the US elections).
Free Books - Classics and Modern Literature
If you are like me and you absolutely need to read something before going off to sleep you might want to check an online repository of plain vanilla text e-books (if you thought that the site is about recipes then you definitely need to read.... A LOT!) - check The Gutenberg Project - an online repository of more than 20,000 book titles from the classics up to some pretty new ones. Don't expect to see any of Crichton novel in there, but am pretty sure Shakespear is much better than he is... definitely.
Note... check the Complete Grimm Fairy Tales, the original version, or The Prince... I hope though that one day, Paolo Coelho will allow the site to publish "The Alchemist" - my personal fav.
There really is no such thing as free education - but with the right connection (read: internet) you can actually do some self study in one of the best university in the US - the Massachusets Institure of Technology, or more commonly referred to as MIT.
The OpenCourseWare (http://ocw.mit.edu) provides online material for courses that is freely available to the public. They have some simple text based courses (for those with low bandwith) and some with multi-media enhanced material using streaming video etc. etc. - Seriously, I'd love to quote the write up in the site but I don't have the patience to read their legal terms blah(2x) and am not sure if I am allowed to quote from their site... but am pretty sure they do -- with certain restrictions of course.
Here is a listing of the Departments that offers their courses online.
On a side note, am right now brushing up in CS and Foreign Languages. Too bad they don't have astrology otherwise I'd be signing up so I can predict my success....
I stumbled upon this valuable bit of information while watching cnn.com (in between the daily entertainment about the US elections).
Free Books - Classics and Modern Literature
If you are like me and you absolutely need to read something before going off to sleep you might want to check an online repository of plain vanilla text e-books (if you thought that the site is about recipes then you definitely need to read.... A LOT!) - check The Gutenberg Project - an online repository of more than 20,000 book titles from the classics up to some pretty new ones. Don't expect to see any of Crichton novel in there, but am pretty sure Shakespear is much better than he is... definitely.
Note... check the Complete Grimm Fairy Tales, the original version, or The Prince... I hope though that one day, Paolo Coelho will allow the site to publish "The Alchemist" - my personal fav.
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