A video lecture and tutorials collection site.

AI Thread Summary
The discussion highlights a website, videolectures.net, that offers a vast collection of video lectures and tutorials, particularly beneficial for those studying computer vision and image processing. Users appreciate the synchronized slides that enhance the learning experience while watching the videos. The site has recently begun a collaboration with MIT OpenCourseWare, promising new courses to be added weekly. Participants express gratitude for the resource, noting its usefulness. Overall, the platform is recognized as a valuable educational tool.
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hi, PHers, I found a site:
http://videolectures.net/
which contain a lot of video lectures and tutorials. There are a lot video there. When it is playing a video, the slides will change synchronously.:rolleyes:
I'm major in Computer vision and image Processing, hope we can communicate each other in PF.
 
Mathematics news on Phys.org
I'm grad that you like these videos, since I post this message in this forum, no one replied till now. Good Luck.
 
This is good stuff. Thank You.
 
gr8 link ...
really was very usefull for me :)
 
MIT openCourse is added.
http://videolectures.net/mit_ocw/
"We are excited to announce that we have started a video educational
collaboration with MIT OpenCourseWare. New courses will be available
every week. You will be able to check them on this page."
 
Seemingly by some mathematical coincidence, a hexagon of sides 2,2,7,7, 11, and 11 can be inscribed in a circle of radius 7. The other day I saw a math problem on line, which they said came from a Polish Olympiad, where you compute the length x of the 3rd side which is the same as the radius, so that the sides of length 2,x, and 11 are inscribed on the arc of a semi-circle. The law of cosines applied twice gives the answer for x of exactly 7, but the arithmetic is so complex that the...
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