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UK university lectures on iTunes

At Spoken Word Services we have trialled podcasting of lectures in different subject areas here at Glasgow Caledonian University. If things had worked out differently GCU may have gone to iTunesU earlier too – still, it’s not too late …

Story from BBC News

‘University College London, the Open University and Trinity College Dublin are putting lectures onto iTunes.

Educational content is already available in the United States through the non-charging “iTunes U” section of the music downloading service.

But European universities are now joining, providing video and audio material for students to use on iPods or computers.

The service will include recordings of lectures from leading academics.

“Our students will be able to revisit materials presented to them in lectures, so they can learn anywhere and anytime,” says Professor Peter Mobbs at University College London (UCL).

Lecture on demand

The initial offerings from UCL will include material about neuroscience, the university’s “lunch time lectures” and an audio news round-up.

The Open University is promising to make available 300 audio and video files with material from current courses.

Trinity College Dublin is promising lectures from journalist Seymour Hersh, scientist Robert Winston, author Anita Desai and politician Alex Salmond.

This will be available from iTunes U, launched by Apple computers last summer as a free education area within the iTunes online music and video store.

It is intended to make lectures available to students at the institutions and to a wider public audience.

This has been used by leading US universities to provide lectures and research news, including Harvard, Yale, Stanford, UC Berkeley and MIT.

Many universities in the UK have been making their own podcasts of lectures, but this will be the first time they have been distributed on the iconic iTunes service.

Open University vice-chancellor Brenda Gourley said it was an exciting new opportunity for anyone, anywhere in the world to gain easy access to its courses.

“Our aim is to partner our established distance learning expertise with the power of the internet to provide as mobile, flexible and personalised learning as possible, whatever your current educational level, personal circumstances or technological abilities.”

A recent market survey showed that four billion songs have been sold through the service since it launched five years ago, making it the biggest music retailer in the United States.

The iTunes service gained its dominant position in online music as the downloading service for the iPod player.

A spokesperson for University College London said that the service would appeal to “techno-literate students” and “reach new audiences around the world”. ‘

Apple launches education site through iTunes

Apple have just formally announced iTunesU, a collection of course materials and campus-life oriented podcasts from some of America’s top Colleges and Universities. This is actually a new section of their iTunes store, as well as the name for their partnership with these universities. Participating schools include MIT, Bowdoin, Arizona State, and the University of Maryland. In fact, Apple claims that over 250 schools are sharing content through the iTunes store now.

“iTunes U makes it easy for anyone to access amazing educational material from many of the country’s most respected colleges and universities,” said Eddy Cue, Apple’s vice president of iTunes. “Education is a lifelong pursuit and we’re pleased to give everyone the ability to download lectures, speeches and other academic content for free.”

Created in collaboration with colleges and universities, iTunes U makes it easier than ever to extend learning, explore interests, learn more about a school and stay connected with an alma mater. Content from iTunes can be loaded onto an iPod.

Read the official Apple Press release here.

iTunesU

BBC plans iTunes alternative

The BBC wants other UK broadcasters to work with it to create a new online TV-show portal. The company’s proposals are being described as an attempt to create an alternative to iTunes video downloads in a Financial Times report.

According to the Financial Times, John Smith, chief executive of BBC Worldwide, said the BBC’s online service (which uses iPlayer software and doesn’t yet support Macs) could be a virtual Freeview.

The report explains: “iPlayer could be like Freeview in creating a new digital platform for broadcasters, giving them a chance to control their own destiny, but like Sky in its opportunities for monetisation.”

Read more information here.

Goldenly Delicious Tags Page from Open Repositories 2007

Golden Delicious

A conference attendee has set up this del.icio.us page with tags linking to content discussed and presented at the Open Repositories Conference in Texas. There is a particularly interesting tag leading to an article by Paul Miller, ‘The Technology Evangelist’, on library 2.0. The del.icio.us page can be found by clicking here.

ClickTV: collaborative video annotator

Click.tv is offering a nifty Flash-based collaborative video annotation and tagging service, somewhat similar to our Northwestern University partners’ Project Pad web application. A seemingly unique feature of Click.tv among the widely-available web annotators is its capacity for multiple annotation tracks.

One early application has been to combine Engadget, Gizmodo, Wired’s Cult of Mac and others’ coverage of last week’s keynote address at the Macworld conference in San Francisco. So if you want to get your geek on and witness the first searchable, collaborative streaming index of the Reality Distortion Field in action, head on over to the Jobsnote on Macrumors/Click.tv.

Google and Apple

Iain picked this up. Potentially significant appointment of Google CEO Eric Schmidt to the Apple Board…

On August 29, 2006, Apple Computer, Inc. (the “Company”) appointed Dr. Eric Schmidt to its Board of Directors (the “Board”). A copy of the press release issued by the Company on August 29, 2006, announcing Dr. Schmidt’s appointment to the Board, is attached hereto as Exhibit 99.1.

(Via Ben Metcalfe Blog.)