Instructional Video12:18
Crash Course

Operating Systems: Crash Course Computer Science

12th - Higher Ed
So as you may have noticed from last episode, computers keep getting faster and faster, and by the start of the 1950s they had gotten so fast that it often took longer to manually load programs via punch cards than to actually run them!...
Instructional Video3:33
SciShow

Science Superlatives of 2013

12th - Higher Ed
Hank counts down some of the science superlatives from 2013: the first, biggest, strongest and longest things that were discovered, built or otherwise described. Find out his year's superlatives. They're the best!
Instructional Video8:31
Crash Course

Artificial Intelligence & Personhood: Crash Course Philosophy

12th - Higher Ed
Today Hank explores artificial intelligence, including weak AI and strong AI, and the various ways that thinkers have tried to define strong AI including the Turing Test, and John Searle’s response to the Turing Test, the Chinese Room....
Instructional Video13:08
TED Talks

Brenda Laurel: Why not make video games for girls?

12th - Higher Ed
At TED in 1998, Brenda Laurel asks: Why are all the top-selling videogames aimed at little boys? She spent two years researching the world of girls (and shares amazing interviews and photos) to create a game that girls would love.
Instructional Video5:02
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How to manage your time more effectively (according to machines) - Brian Christian

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Human beings and computers alike share the challenge of how to get as much done as possible in a limited time. Over the last fifty or so years, computer scientists have learned a lot of good strategies for managing time effectively - and...
Instructional Video7:30
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Inside OKCupid: The math of online dating - Christian Rudder

Pre-K - Higher Ed
When two people join a dating website, they are matched according to shared interests and how they answer a number of personal questions. But how do sites calculate the likelihood of a successful relationship? Christian Rudder, one of...
Instructional Video15:27
TED Talks

TED: The incredible inventions of intuitive AI | Maurice Conti

12th - Higher Ed
What do you get when you give a design tool a digital nervous system? Computers that improve our ability to think and imagine, and robotic systems that come up with (and build) radical new designs for bridges, cars, drones and much more...
Instructional Video2:09
MinutePhysics

Can We Predict Everything

12th - Higher Ed
Einstein didn't like quantum mechanics because it wasn't able to make perfect predictions... but science is not about what you like, it's about what's true!
Instructional Video2:56
SciShow

Alan Turing: Great Minds

12th - Higher Ed
Hank introduces us to that great mathematical mind, Alan Turing, who, as an openly gay man in the early 20th century faced brutal prejudice that eventually led to his suicide, despite being a genius war hero who helped the Allies defeat...
Instructional Video2:30
MinutePhysics

Why is the Sun Yellow and the Sky Blue

12th - Higher Ed
Why is the Sun Yellow and the Sky Blue
Instructional Video6:12
TED Talks

James Patten: The best computer interface? Maybe ... your hands

12th - Higher Ed
"The computer is an incredibly powerful means of creative expression," says designer and TED Fellow James Patten. But right now, we interact with computers, mainly, by typing and tapping. In this nifty talk and demo, Patten imagines a...
Instructional Video12:04
PBS

Computing a Universe Simulation

12th - Higher Ed
Physics seems to be telling us that it's possible to simulate the entire universe on a computer smaller than the universe
Instructional Video3:48
SciShow

How Much Data Can Our Brains Store?

12th - Higher Ed
Our brains aren't exactly like a computer's hard drive, but it can still be fun to think about just how much storage space we have in our noggins.
Instructional Video5:30
SciShow

How We Learned Black Holes Actually Exist | 2020 Nobel Prize in Physics

12th - Higher Ed
Did you know Einstein never thought we’d find actual black holes in space? It took decades of research to show black holes are physically possible, and some of the scientists behind that research were honored this year with the Nobel...
Instructional Video12:27
Crash Course

Alan Turing: Crash Course Computer Science

12th - Higher Ed
Today we’re going to take a step back from programming and discuss the person who formulated many of the theoretical concepts that underlie modern computation - the father of computer science himself: Alan Turing. Now normally we try to...
Instructional Video15:58
TED Talks

John Maeda: Designing for simplicity

12th - Higher Ed
The MIT Media Lab's John Maeda lives at the intersection of technology and art, a place that can get very complicated. Here he talks about paring down to basics.
Instructional Video16:53
TED Talks

Avi Rubin: All your devices can be hacked

12th - Higher Ed
Could someone hack your pacemaker? Avi Rubin shows how hackers are compromising cars, smartphones and medical devices, and warns us about the dangers of an increasingly hack-able world.
Instructional Video14:24
PBS

Why Computers are Bad at Algebra

12th - Higher Ed
The answer lies in the weirdness of floating-point numbers and the computer's perception of a number line.
Instructional Video5:08
TED Talks

Jinha Lee: Reach into the computer and grab a pixel

12th - Higher Ed
The border between our physical world and the digital information surrounding us has been getting thinner and thinner. Designer and engineer Jinha Lee wants to dissolve it altogether. As he demonstrates in this short, gasp-inducing talk,...
Instructional Video3:31
SciShow

Ada Lovelace: Great Minds

12th - Higher Ed
Ada Lovelace, Daughter of Lord Byron, was somehow the first author of a computer program...even though she lived more than a century before the first modern computer.
Instructional Video18:02
TED Talks

TED: The mystery box | J.J. Abrams

12th - Higher Ed
J.J. Abrams traces his love for the unseen mystery –- a passion that's evident in his films and TV shows, including Lost, Star Trek and the upcoming Star Wars VII -- back to its magical beginnings.
Instructional Video10:15
SciShow

5 Devastating Security Flaws You've Never Heard Of

12th - Higher Ed
Devastating vulnerabilities are hiding in the technology in programs, protocols, and hardware all around us. Most of the time, you can find ways to protect yourself.
Instructional Video9:23
TED Talks

Tom Wujec: Learn to use the 13th-century astrolabe

12th - Higher Ed
Rather than demo another new technology, Tom Wujec reaches back to one of our earliest but most ingenious devices -- the astrolabe. With thousands of uses, from telling time to mapping the night sky, this old tech reminds us that the...
Instructional Video12:08
TED Talks

John Graham-Cumming: The greatest machine that never was

12th - Higher Ed
Computer science began in the '30s ... the 1830s. John Graham-Cumming tells the story of Charles Babbage's mechanical, steam-powered "analytical engine" and how Ada Lovelace, mathematician and daughter of Lord Byron, saw beyond its...