Online courses directory (19947)
How to Drive a Stick Shift (Manual Transmission) Car The following videos show the basics and some more advanced methods
German 59: Holocaust in Film and Literature is a course that provides insight into the History of Holocaust and its pres
A step-by-step iOS development tutorial for aspiring developers with no coding or Objective-C experience.
iOS, Android, Amazon and Windows 8 game development course that will get you started with HTML5 game development.
Learn how to wrangle files in Drupal 7. We cover the most critical aspects of the File API including uploads and privacy
The course covers BOTH the technical set-up aspects AND content driven marketing strategies that apply to EVERY business
Bill Jelen will save you 100 hours per year with the Excel Tips and Tricks on this LiveLessons video tutorial.
Get this course only for $249 using the coupon code HAPPYHOLIDAYS. Valid until 31-DEC-2012.
This video training tutorials is part of our library at Watch and Learn Tutorials. This course consist of video training
All you need to start a successful wedding photography business.
Understand how to define the right keywords, write the winning advert and use all the techniques to lower your price.
SAP (ECC 6.0) Integration with EDI
Learn the step-by-step system I used to create a best-selling eBook publishing company! Publish your first eBook today!
Get 10-hours of training and discover SharePoint's powerful collaboration and content management application.
Applies solid mechanics to analysis of high-technology structures. Structural design considerations. Review of three-dimensional elasticity theory; stress, strain, anisotropic materials, and heating effects. Two-dimensional plane stress and plane strain problems. Torsion theory for arbitrary sections. Bending of unsymmetrical section and mixed material beams. Bending, shear, and torsion of thin-wall shell beams. Buckling of columns and stability phenomena. Introduction to structural dynamics. Exercises in the design of general and aerospace structures.
This independent experimental study course is designed to allow students with a strong interest in independent research to fulfill the project laboratory requirement for the Biology Department Program in the context of a research laboratory at MIT. The research should be a continuation of a previous project under the direction of a member of the Biology Department faculty.
This course provides instruction and practice in written and oral communication. Journal club discussions are used to help students evaluate and write scientific papers.
This course teaches the principles and analysis of electromechanical systems. Students will develop analytical techniques for predicting device and system interaction characteristics as well as learn to design major classes of electric machines. Problems used in the course are intended to strengthen understanding of the phenomena and interactions in electromechanics, and include examples from current research.
This course provides an introduction to the study of environmental phenomena that exhibit both organized structure and wide variability—i.e., complexity. Through focused study of a variety of physical, biological, and chemical problems in conjunction with theoretical models, we learn a series of lessons with wide applicability to understanding the structure and organization of the natural world. Students also learn how to construct minimal mathematical, physical, and computational models that provide informative answers to precise questions.
This course is appropriate for advanced undergraduates. Beginning graduate students are encouraged to register for 12.586 (graduate version of 12.086). Students taking the graduate version complete different assignments.
This introductory course teaches the fundamentals of microeconomics. Topics include consumer theory, producer theory, the behavior of firms, market equilibrium, monopoly, and the role of the government in the economy. 14.01 is a Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences (HASS) elective and is offered both terms.
This course is a core subject in MIT's undergraduate Energy Studies Minor. This Institute-wide program complements the deep expertise obtained in any major with a broad understanding of the interlinked realms of science, technology, and social sciences as they relate to energy and associated environmental challenges.
This course is an introduction to the fundamentals of game theory and mechanism design. Motivations are drawn from engineered/networked systems (including distributed control of wireline and wireless communication networks, incentive-compatible/dynamic resource allocation, multi-agent systems, pricing and investment decisions in the Internet), and social models (including social and economic networks). The course emphasizes theoretical foundations, mathematical tools, modeling, and equilibrium notions in different environments.
Trusted paper writing service WriteMyPaper.Today will write the papers of any difficulty.