New Electrical Engineering videos from worldwide Universities: conferences and seminars
A Stretchy, Curvy Future for Electronics
John A. Rogers, Lee J. Flory-Founder Chair in Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, delivers the 2011 Nyquist Lecture in Electrical Engineering on the future of electronics.
Yale University
Illah Nourbakhsh Lecture: Ethics in Robotics
Are there types of robots that shouldn't be created? Should we use robots in military combat? Or is there actually nothing to worry about? Carnegie Mellon Robotics Institute professor Illah Nourbakhsh addresses issues raised by recent book Wired for War by P.W. Singer and gives his personal take on ethics and robotics.
Carnegie Mellon
Random Access Memory
A video by Jim Pytel for renewable energy technology students at Columbia Gorge Community College
Columbia Gorge Community College.
The Cyborg Experiments - Kevin Warwick
Kevin Warwick, Professor of Cybernetics at the University of Reading, speaks at Virtual Futures 2.0 about his work in the field of robotics, artificial intelligence and biomedical engineering. In his talk, he offers a real insite into the pioneering work being done and the potential for huge advancements in the future.
University of Warwick
New Electrical Engineering videos from worldwide Universities: courses
Introduction to Algorithms
This course teaches techniques for the design and analysis of efficient algorithms, emphasizing methods useful in practice. Topics covered include: sorting; search trees, heaps, and hashing; divide-and-conquer; dynamic programming; amortized analysis; graph algorithms; shortest paths; network flow; computational geometry; number-theoretic algorithms; polynomial and matrix calculations; caching; and parallel computing. This course was also taught as part of the Singapore-MIT Alliance
MIT
Renewable Energy & Alternative Fuels This course introduces students to the legal, economic, and structural issues that both shape our energy practices and provide opportunities to overcome these critical problems. The course focuses primarily on the regulation and design of electricity systems and markets, since so many energy choices—the use of oil, natural gas, coal, nuclear, the green alternatives such as solar, wind, and energy conservation or demand side management— relate to the way we generate or deliver electricity, or avoid the need to do so.
UC Berkeley
Introduction to Robotics Introduction to Robotics (CS223A) covers topics such as Spatial Descriptions, Forward Kinematics, Inverse Kinematics, Jacobians, Dynamics, Motion Planning and Trajectory Generation, Position and Force Control, and Manipulator Design.