Computer Science 61A, 001 - Spring 2015
The Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs - John S. Denero
Creative Commons 3.0: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs
UC Berkeley students now in their eighties and nineties finally received the campus degrees they had been working toward nearly seven decades ago, when Japanese Americans were sent to internment camps in the midst of World War II.
See Full Story: http://berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2009/09/08_honorarydegrees.shtml
Video produced by Roxanne Makasdjian, UC Berkeley Media Relations
Online Graphics Course OpenGL Shading: Motivation
Table of Contents:
00:13 - Motivation for Lecture
01:42 - Demo for mytest3
02:49 - Importance of Lighting
04:58 - Brief primer on Color
08:40 - Outline
09:19 - Vertex vs Fragment Shaders
Martin Corless-Smith was born and raised in Worcestershire, England. He is the author of English Fragments: A Brief History of the Soul, Swallows, Nota, Complete Travels, and Of Piscator. A limited edition chapbook, Roman and Moscow Poems, was published in 2011. He was Truman Capote Fellow at the Iowa Writers Workshop, and holds an MFA in Fine Arts and Printmaking from SMU and a Ph.D. in Creative Writing from the University at Utah. He is currently the director of the MFA Program in Creative Writing at Boise State University.
http://holloway.english.berkeley.edu/
UC Berkeley has helped establish a new psychology department at China's Tsinghua University. Professor Kaipeng Peng discusses the "Science of Happiness." He says the social changes brought about by China's move from socialism to capitalism have made the study of psychology there more important, and that the collaboration also helps American psychologists learn more about psychological differences between cultures.
Video produced by Roxanne Makasdjian, UC Berkeley Media Relations
Full Story: http://berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2010/07/15_happiness.shtml
Fair Trade Certification is seeking to peel back a long history of adverse economic, social, health and environmental conditions on banana farms and plantations and replace it with the hope of a brighter future for banana growing communities. We will explain how Fair Trade makes a difference and ways that you and your students can help make Fair Trade the new reality for banana cultivation.
Anne Toepel is a teacher, curriculum author and member of the Global Exchange Fair Trade Team. Jeff Kaloustian is a Global Exchange Graduate Student Summer Fellow.
http://clas.berkeley.edu/