Hi Everyone,
I mentioned in a previous post that I'd be collaborating with an MIT group on a course they're running about "computational thinking" this semester. Well, it's happening! Linked above is the first live lecture I gave. There was also an asynchronous lecture earlier in the week giving the basics of working with images in the language used for this class (Julia).
Course intro: https://youtu.be/vxjRWtWoD_w
Lecture 1: https://youtu.be/8rrHTtUzyZA
It's a funny little elective course, where the plan is, admittedly, rather scattered. There are four units, image processing, ray tracing, epidemic modeling, and applications to climate science. Each one is meant to give a context where we can talk about some general principles in computation and math. Also, given that the group running the course is MIT's Julia lab, it's effectively a course on working with Julia as much as anything else.
My own role here is simply to give the occasional lecture and generally provide advising on the nature of teaching over the internet. So far, it's been a wonderful chance to learn new things and play around with different styles, e.g. putting the code much more front-and-center than it typically is in a lot of my other work.
It's not entirely decided how frequently I'll lecture. The general goal is to be helpful to the course, but without interfering too much with keeping things moving on the 3blue1brown front.
------
Also, the Hamming code videos are now out, including Ben Eater's, which you should most certainly check out.
Ben Eater's video:
https://youtu.be/h0jloehRKas
Part 1:
https://youtu.be/X8jsijhllIA
Part 2:
https://youtu.be/b3NxrZOu_CE
I hope you're all doing well,
-Grant
3blue1brown
2021-04-16 00:18:56 +0000 UTCJohn Nichols
2021-04-10 20:24:27 +0000 UTC3blue1brown
2020-09-06 21:28:27 +0000 UTCwhite beard geek
2020-09-05 15:26:59 +0000 UTCDoug Fort
2020-09-04 19:01:34 +0000 UTCGabe
2020-09-04 17:39:23 +0000 UTC