The Argument for Free Classes via iTunes

iTunes Store
Image by Brajeshwar via Flickr

The music, videos and mobile applications available through Apple’s iTunes Store get all the attention, but it might be time to acknowledge the increasingly varied and popular offerings of iTunes U, Apple’s catalog of lectures from colleges and universities around the world.

More than 600 schools post lectures to the two-year-old service, which recently got some added visibility when Apple rolled out iTunes 9 this fall: its own prominent category next to music, movies and podcasts.

Apple now says it has about 250,000 individual classes available to the public. That’s everything from the “The Biology of Autism” from the Stanford School of Medicine to “A Global History of Architecture” from M.I.T. Tuition may be sky-high on those campuses, but on iTunes, the lectures are free.

Near the head of the class, with more than 375,000 downloads a week, is Open University, a distance-learning institution based in Britain. The school said that last weekend its lectures on iTunes U crossed the 10-million-downloads mark.

Read more . . .

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]




  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , ,

Leave a comment

Archives

IT Random Post

  • New Technology Takes On Food Safety, Wastage And Inaccurate 'Best Before' Dates

    [caption id="" align="alignright" width="150" caption="Image by Getty Images via Daylife"][/caption] Advances in sensing technology will help to reduce the wastage from 'farm to fork' that's contributing to the UK's £10 billion food wastage bill, according to the UK's Sensors & Instrum
  • Tires could be on the road to a greener future

    According to the American Chemical Society, seven gallons of crude oil go into each one of approximately a billion car tires that are produced every year worldwide. Today, however, scientists announced a development that could drastically reduce oil usage in tires. It involves isoprene, a hyd
  • String of offshore turbines along East Coast could provide steady supply of wind power

    Image via Wikipedia The problem with generating electricity by harnessing the wind is that it doesn't always blow (though it may seem that way at times). And, typically, consumers remain intolerant of power interruptions. But there may be a way to ensure a steady supply of wind, according
  • Blocking the Sky to Save the Earth

    [caption id="" align="alignright" width="202" caption="Image via Wikipedia"][/caption]   TO the relief of climate scientists around the world, it appears that the polar ice cap hasn’t shrunk as much this summer as it did last summer. The ice cap usually reaches its smallest extent
  • New high-speed, low-cost water purifying nanofilter developed

    As their name suggests, most existing water purifying filters clean the water by physically trapping or filtering out bacteria. Stanford researchers have now developed a new kind of water purifying filter that isn’t really a filter at all. Instead of trapping bacteria, the new filter actual

Categories

69 visitors online now
44 guests, 25 bots, 0 members
Max visitors today: 92 at 12:00 am EDT
This month: 167 at 09-06-2010 11:14 am EDT
This year: 214 at 08-29-2010 10:20 pm EDT
All time: 214 at 08-29-2010 10:20 pm EDT
Blog WebMastered by All in One Webmaster.