A video lecture and tutorials collection site.

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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."
 
Insights auto threads is broken atm, so I'm manually creating these for new Insight articles. In Dirac’s Principles of Quantum Mechanics published in 1930 he introduced a “convenient notation” he referred to as a “delta function” which he treated as a continuum analog to the discrete Kronecker delta. The Kronecker delta is simply the indexed components of the identity operator in matrix algebra Source: https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/what-exactly-is-diracs-delta-function/ by...
Fermat's Last Theorem has long been one of the most famous mathematical problems, and is now one of the most famous theorems. It simply states that the equation $$ a^n+b^n=c^n $$ has no solutions with positive integers if ##n>2.## It was named after Pierre de Fermat (1607-1665). The problem itself stems from the book Arithmetica by Diophantus of Alexandria. It gained popularity because Fermat noted in his copy "Cubum autem in duos cubos, aut quadratoquadratum in duos quadratoquadratos, et...
Thread 'Imaginary Pythagorus'
I posted this in the Lame Math thread, but it's got me thinking. Is there any validity to this? Or is it really just a mathematical trick? Naively, I see that i2 + plus 12 does equal zero2. But does this have a meaning? I know one can treat the imaginary number line as just another axis like the reals, but does that mean this does represent a triangle in the complex plane with a hypotenuse of length zero? Ibix offered a rendering of the diagram using what I assume is matrix* notation...
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