Oxford and Cambridge lectures online for all
  • http://www.hindu.com/2008/10/08/stories/2008100856422000.htm

    Venerable universities seek to display their wares on iTunes

    About 450 hours of free audio and video podcasts

    Available from download provider's university portal

    London: For 800 years Oxford and Cambridge universities have competed
    in everything from Nobel prizes to boat races. The academic rivalry
    runs deep: Oxford has tutored 25 British Prime Ministers, while
    Cambridge claims Darwin and Newton as its own. But today the venerable
    institutions launch into battle on iTunes, taking their ancient
    competition into the 21st century.

    The universities are simultaneously publishing about 450 hours of free
    audio and video podcasts of lectures, films and admissions guides for
    people to download to a computer or MP3 player.

    They will be available from iTunesu, the download provider's
    university portal, where American institutions have been broadcasting
    their academic wares for some years. Both universities will provide
    podcasts advising students on applications, how to choose a college,
    and how to prepare for an interview.

    They deny that Tuesday's simultaneous launch is designed to start an
    iTunes race, instead claiming it is a sign they are opening up to a
    wider audience. Both were happy to provide a rollcall of the great and
    the good who will be available for all under their respective
    university brands. It will inevitably invite accusations of a new
    battleground for the famous foes.

    After eight centuries the competition between the institutions is
    fairly even: Oxford has produced more Prime Ministers but Cambridge
    claims more Nobel laureates. Oxford's podcast includes Michael Palin
    of Monty Python fame in a documentary filmed to promote the
    university's £1.25 billion fundraising drive. Lectures come from
    Professor Joseph Stiglitz, former chief economist of the World Bank;
    Craig Venter, who led the private effort to sequence the human genome;
    Sir Nicholas Stern, the climate change academic; and the philosopher
    Julian Savulescu.

    John Hood, Oxford's Vice-Chancellor, said: "We hope that this service
    will make Oxford's diverse range of audio and video material more
    widely accessible to applicants, alumni, supporters of the university,
    and the intellectually curious."

    Cambridge features podcasts from the historian David Starkey, who
    presents a history of the university and town, and British Foreign
    Secretary David Miliband, and downloads from St. John's College choir.

    "It's not just for students and potential students but for the wider
    public," said Greg Hayman, head of communications at Cambridge. — ©
    Guardian Newspapers Limited, 2008

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