Failed Projects
You start off with the best of intentions, but through raging incompetence, ineptitude or the plain fact that you're working in IT, things go terribly wrong and there's hell to pay. Tell us about the epic failures that have brought big ideas to their knees. Or just blame someone else.
( , Thu 3 Dec 2009, 14:19)
You start off with the best of intentions, but through raging incompetence, ineptitude or the plain fact that you're working in IT, things go terribly wrong and there's hell to pay. Tell us about the epic failures that have brought big ideas to their knees. Or just blame someone else.
( , Thu 3 Dec 2009, 14:19)
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Good Luck!
Stick with it if you can, maths is an excellent subject. Once you get past the basics I would suggest looking at dynamical systems (and if you like that chaos, fractal, and Ergodic theory are awesome).
( , Fri 4 Dec 2009, 11:14, 1 reply)
Stick with it if you can, maths is an excellent subject. Once you get past the basics I would suggest looking at dynamical systems (and if you like that chaos, fractal, and Ergodic theory are awesome).
( , Fri 4 Dec 2009, 11:14, 1 reply)
the only problem
is that it's not really a subject you can research on the internet. Which is why it's a toss up between maths and physics at the moment as the modules I've done will count towards either degree.
( , Fri 4 Dec 2009, 11:28, closed)
is that it's not really a subject you can research on the internet. Which is why it's a toss up between maths and physics at the moment as the modules I've done will count towards either degree.
( , Fri 4 Dec 2009, 11:28, closed)
You'd be suprised
there are lots of notes for modules put on the internet, I've found whole textbooks worth available!
MIT puts material for most of its courses online. Here is the link:
ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/Mathematics/index.htm
Cambridge university notes can be found here:
sites.google.com/site/paulmetcalfe/cambridgemathsnotes
From the times higher education there's the following list:
FREE FOR ALL
To explore the potential of open educational resources, see:
- OpenCourseWare Consortium - www.ocwconsortium.org
- Jorum, the national open educational resources repository - www.jorum.ac.uk
- The Open University's OpenLearn - www.open.ac.uk/openlearn
- MIT's OpenCourseWare - ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb
- Apple's iTunes U - www.apple.com/education/mobile-learning
- CcLearn, a division of Creative Commons dedicated to supporting open learning and open educational resources - learn.creative commons.org/resources
- Open Educational Resources Commons, a network of shared teaching and learning materials - www.oercommons.org
If there's anything specific you'd like notes on feel free to ask me.
( , Fri 4 Dec 2009, 12:15, closed)
there are lots of notes for modules put on the internet, I've found whole textbooks worth available!
MIT puts material for most of its courses online. Here is the link:
ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/Mathematics/index.htm
Cambridge university notes can be found here:
sites.google.com/site/paulmetcalfe/cambridgemathsnotes
From the times higher education there's the following list:
FREE FOR ALL
To explore the potential of open educational resources, see:
- OpenCourseWare Consortium - www.ocwconsortium.org
- Jorum, the national open educational resources repository - www.jorum.ac.uk
- The Open University's OpenLearn - www.open.ac.uk/openlearn
- MIT's OpenCourseWare - ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb
- Apple's iTunes U - www.apple.com/education/mobile-learning
- CcLearn, a division of Creative Commons dedicated to supporting open learning and open educational resources - learn.creative commons.org/resources
- Open Educational Resources Commons, a network of shared teaching and learning materials - www.oercommons.org
If there's anything specific you'd like notes on feel free to ask me.
( , Fri 4 Dec 2009, 12:15, closed)
Thank-you
and that was just off the top of my own head. There's much to be found online for mathematics.
( , Sun 6 Dec 2009, 18:51, closed)
and that was just off the top of my own head. There's much to be found online for mathematics.
( , Sun 6 Dec 2009, 18:51, closed)
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