9:43
Computer Dictionary - What Is An Operating System or OS
www.worthgodwin.com - A simple, plain English explanation of the computer term "operating ...
published: 22 Jun 2008
author: videopublish
Computer Dictionary - What Is An Operating System or OS
www.worthgodwin.com - A simple, plain English explanation of the computer term "operating system" (or OS) that will actually make sense. More
published: 22 Jun 2008
views: 43622
3:21
What is Google Chrome OS?
Telling the story of Google Chrome and how it inspired an operating system. Produced by Ep...
published: 19 Nov 2009
author: Google Chrome
What is Google Chrome OS?
Telling the story of Google Chrome and how it inspired an operating system. Produced by Epipheo Studios. Sign up to get updates about Google Chrome OS: services.google.com More info: www.chromium.org
published: 19 Nov 2009
views: 5041771
author:
Google Chrome
81:58
Computer Science 162 - Lecture 1
Operating Systems and System Programming...
published: 31 Aug 2010
author: UCBerkeley
Computer Science 162 - Lecture 1
8:31
How To Make An Operating System
In this episode, gigafide shows you how to create our own operating system using the Assem...
published: 03 Aug 2010
author: gigafide
How To Make An Operating System
In this episode, gigafide shows you how to create our own operating system using the Assembly programming language. Project Files: www.tinkernut.com Learn Assembly: en.wikipedia.org www.drpaulcarter.com www.xs4all.nl joelgompert.com Operating System Credit/Reference: mikeos.berlios.de Virtual Box www.virtualbox.org Disk Images www.allbootdisks.com NASM: nasm.sourceforge.net
published: 03 Aug 2010
views: 306284
author:
gigafide
47:13
Operating Systems
Operating Systems...
published: 08 Sep 2008
author: ignousocis
Operating Systems
2:26
What is an Operating System (OS)
I'm starting to do these NanoTutorials. I hope they turned out okay. Let me know if you gu...
published: 11 Jul 2012
author: Kylemorgan49
What is an Operating System (OS)
I'm starting to do these NanoTutorials. I hope they turned out okay. Let me know if you guys like this style of short tuts. Website: KyleMorgan49.com G+: plus.google.com/113340166165914127630/posts Facebook: www.fb.com/KyleMorgan49 Email: KyleMorgan49@gmail.com
published: 11 Jul 2012
views: 2428
author:
Kylemorgan49
6:32
7 Free Online Operating Systems
** Please Read Full Description ** In this video, I show you 7 free on-line Operating Syst...
published: 18 Sep 2009
author: BulletOfBullets
7 Free Online Operating Systems
** Please Read Full Description ** In this video, I show you 7 free on-line Operating Systems. Links: AstraNOS: www.astranos.org EyeOS: www.eyeos.info G.ho.st: g.ho.st Glide OS 3.0: simurl.us myGoya: www.mygoya.de WebX: andrewmin.com Windows4All: www.windows4all.com Thats 7 On-line OS's. Thanks for watching Please comment rate and subscribe for more videos.
published: 18 Sep 2009
views: 63862
author:
BulletOfBullets
9:05
Hardware and Operating System basics - 1 of 11
Fundamental concepts of computer hardware, operating systems, and how the two work togethe...
published: 16 Apr 2010
author: Brian Will
Hardware and Operating System basics - 1 of 11
Fundamental concepts of computer hardware, operating systems, and how the two work together. Visit codeschool.org
published: 16 Apr 2010
views: 28670
author:
Brian Will
3:39
The Story of Linux: Commemorating 20 Years of the Linux Operating System
Celebrate the 20th Anniversary of Linux with us. Watch the Story of Linux to remember - or...
published: 31 Mar 2011
author: TheLinuxFoundation
The Story of Linux: Commemorating 20 Years of the Linux Operating System
Celebrate the 20th Anniversary of Linux with us. Watch the Story of Linux to remember - or learn for the first time - how Linux disrupted a market and has begun to change the world. Do you see yourself in its story?
published: 31 Mar 2011
views: 461653
author:
TheLinuxFoundation
2:14
Computer Basics: Understanding Operating Systems
www.gcflearnfree.org An operating system is the most important software that runs on a com...
published: 09 Mar 2012
author: gcflearnfree
Computer Basics: Understanding Operating Systems
www.gcflearnfree.org An operating system is the most important software that runs on a computer. It manages the computer's memory, processes, and all of its software and hardware. It also allows you to communicate with the computer without knowing how to speak the computer's "language." Without an operating system, a computer is useless. Watch the video to learn about operating systems. If you are interested in learning more about this topic, please visit our site to view the entire tutorial on our website. It includes instructional text, informational graphics, examples, and even interactives for you to practice and apply what you've learned.
published: 09 Mar 2012
views: 8780
author:
gcflearnfree
83:51
Principles of Operating System - Lecture 2
This lecture covers chapter 1, the overview of Operating Systems....
published: 20 Sep 2011
author: Barbara Hecker
Principles of Operating System - Lecture 2
This lecture covers chapter 1, the overview of Operating Systems.
published: 20 Sep 2011
views: 32535
author:
Barbara Hecker
9:55
BeOS The incredible OS that disappeared (part 1) Be Operating System
(HAIKU is the NEW 2009 BeOS! :) BeOS! The best multimedia operating system ever invented! ...
published: 11 May 2009
author: gunthaarz
BeOS The incredible OS that disappeared (part 1) Be Operating System
(HAIKU is the NEW 2009 BeOS! :) BeOS! The best multimedia operating system ever invented! Movie is showing old dual P2-266! They tried 6 Avi's parallel on a Pentium 4-1500 mhz or 23 Mp3's parallel,hectic! ;-), also no crash with scratched CD's! etc. Hardware support only till P4 and Riva TNT. en.wikipedia.org Haiku is a software project, begun in 2001 to create a free and open source operating system compatible with BeOS. The project was known as OpenBeOS until ... [Site popularity rank: #7] Download BeOS 5 Free Personal Edition: www.bebits.com Reviews: aroundcny.com and www.reghardware.co.uk See also: www.youtube.com if you want to add info to this frame click here: www.youtube.com
published: 11 May 2009
views: 49953
author:
gunthaarz
8:14
How To Install Dual Operating Systems
This video will guide you through the steps of setting your computer up to boot two differ...
published: 12 Feb 2009
author: gigafide
How To Install Dual Operating Systems
This video will guide you through the steps of setting your computer up to boot two different operating systems. The links used in this video are: Gparted - gparted.sourceforge.net Wubi - www.wubi-installer.org Boot Manager - http
published: 12 Feb 2009
views: 429839
author:
gigafide
1:40
Free Course: Computer Basics - The Operating System
Study this free course by registering at: alison.com The free online course introduces you...
published: 22 Nov 2010
author: AlisonOnlineCourses
Free Course: Computer Basics - The Operating System
Study this free course by registering at: alison.com The free online course introduces you to the basics of computers. It will teach you about different computer features used everyday at work and at home. This course provides learners with the IT skills that are necessary in today's workplace. It covers basic Microsoft Office computer applications and touch typing training. This clip is taken from the FREE interactive online course available at: ALISON.com
published: 22 Nov 2010
views: 23402
author:
AlisonOnlineCourses
Vimeo results:
1:58
THE BEGINNING OF INFINITY
By @jasonsilva and @notthisbody - Follow us on Twitter!
"The adjacent possible is a kind...
published: 02 Oct 2011
author: Jason Silva
THE BEGINNING OF INFINITY
By @jasonsilva and @notthisbody - Follow us on Twitter!
"The adjacent possible is a kind of shadow future, hovering on the edges of the present state of things, a map of all the ways in which the present can reinvent itself." - Steven Johnson
Other videos -
You are a RCVR - http://vimeo.com/27671433
To Understand Is To Perceive Patterns - http://vimeo.com/34182381
Imagination - http://vimeo.com/34902950
Abundance - http://vimeo.com/34984088
INSPIRATION:
This video is inspired, in part, by the ideas explored in David Deutsch’s new book, THE BEGINNING OF INFINITY. We hope it moves you.
"The topographical shape and the material constitution of the upper surface of the island of Manhattan, as it exists today, is much less a matter of geology than it is of economics and politics and human psychology. The effects of geological forces were trumped (you might say) by other forces — forces that proved themselves, in the fullness of time, physically stronger. Deutsch thinks the same thing must in the long run be true of the universe as a whole. Stuff like gravitation and dark energy are the sorts of things that determine the shape of the cosmos only in its earliest, and most parochial, and least interesting stages. The rest is going to be a matter of our own intentional doing.." - David Alpert on David Deutsch's new book.
"Some time in the last fifty thousand years, with the invention of culture, the biological evolution of humans ceased and evolution became an epigenetic, cultural phenomenon... technology is the real skin of our species. Humanity, correctly seen in the context of the last five hundred years, is an extruder of technological material. We take in matter that has a low degree of organization; we put it through mental filters, and we extrude jewelry, gospels, space shuttles. This is what we do. We are like coral animals embedded in a technological reef of extruded psychic objects." - Terence Mckenna
**
In our work, we use the tools of editing: we juxtapose 'transcalar' imagery, cutting and overlapping the very small and the very large... From the nano to the galactic, stretching and compressing time, we feature time lapse to reveal the repetitive and recurring patterns across different scales of reality. The aim is to provide multiple perspectives all at once, whose simultaneous presentation might cause spontaneous epiphanies. “These patterns are omnipresent, but only when we see these patterns in a more compressed mode of presentation to we start to attend to them as such.” -- This is KEY!
Paul Stamet's superb book, Mycelium Running, begins with a discussion of what Stamets calls the mycelial archetype. He compares the mushroom mycelium with the overlapping information-sharing systems that comprise the Internet, with the networked neurons in the brain, and with a computer model of dark matter in the universe. All share this densely intertwingled filamental structure.
A recent profile of Stephen Johnson on Dumbo Feather described his work like this:
“Johnson uses ‘The Long Zoom’ to define the way he looks at the world—if you concentrate on any one level, there are patterns that you miss. When you step back and simultaneously consider, say, the sentience of a slime mold, the cultural life of downtown Manhattan and the behaviour of artificially intelligent computer code, new patterns emerge."
On their own, these areas of study are fascinating. Together, a more profound view takes shape.
The article continues, "Put simply: cities are like ant colonies are like software is like slime molds are like evolution is like disease is like sewage systems are like poetry is like the neural pathways in our brain. Everything is connected.”
PERFORMING PHILOSOPHY:
Our stated goal is to re-ignite the art of the "performing philosophers" ... like Timothy Leary and Buckminster Fuller... A post on Space Collective wrote about “thinkers who act as substantial agents of change, who drastically alter the infocologies they interact with, in the process transforming and meshing the different dimensions in which our minds operate.”
We care about the pleasures derived in forming new connections, mash-ups and innovative solutions for the next step in human evolution.
We are working to articulate our understanding through the creation of recombinant media mashups meant to epiphanize audiences----the creating and sharing of awe; "performance philosophy" in an age of collapsing boundaries and exponential creativity.
The director of the Imaginary Foundation described our work as “some kind of Ontological DJ'ing, recompiling the source code of western philosophy by mixing and mashing it up into a form of recombinant creativity, which (hopefully) elevates our understanding from the dry and prosaic, into the sensual and transcendent.”
“The goal is to prove a fresh framework and a new narrative to fill our old storytelling needs in our ever-increasing process of self-description
3:28
Flying Rhinos
Filmed by www.greenrenaissance.co.za (https://www.facebook.com/greenrenaissance) for WWF...
published: 09 Nov 2011
author: Green Renaissance
Flying Rhinos
Filmed by www.greenrenaissance.co.za (https://www.facebook.com/greenrenaissance) for WWF South Africa
Black rhino given new home
The seventh black rhino population established by the WWF Black Rhino Range Expansion Project, was recently released after an epic 1500 kilometre trip across the country. 19 of the critically endangered animals were moved from the Eastern Cape to a new location in Limpopo province.
“This was possible because of the far-sightedness of the Eastern Cape Provincial government who were prepared to become partners in the project for the sake of black rhino conservation in South Africa,” said WWF’s project leader Dr Jacques Flamand. “The operation was difficult due to the number of animals and the long distances involved. But wildlife veterinarians, conservation managers and capture teams from WWF, Eastern Cape Parks and Tourism Agency, SANParks and Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife worked cooperatively to ensure the success of the translocation. We all learned from one another and were united in a common cause.”
“We are a young organisation and this is a great opportunity to be giving something back to the national conservation effort,” said Dave Balfour, conservation director of the Eastern Cape Parks and Tourism Agency. “We are excited about getting ourselves integrated into national conservation. A critical element of future conservation success will be the ability of agencies with a common interest to work together. This was a great example of that."
A relatively new capture technique was used to airlift some of the rhinos out of difficult or inaccessible areas by helicopter. This entails suspending the sleeping rhino by the ankles for a short trip through the air to awaiting vehicles. “Previously rhinos were either transported by lorry over very difficult tracks, or airlifted in a net. This new procedure is gentler on the darted rhino because it shortens the time it has to be kept asleep with drugs, the respiration is not as compromised as it can be in a net and it avoids the need for travel in a crate over terrible tracks,” explains Dr Flamand. “Another advantage is that rhinos can be more easily removed from dangerous situations, for example if they have fallen asleep in a donga or other difficult terrain after being darted. The helicopter translocations usually take less than ten minutes, and the animals suffer no ill effect. All of the veterinarians working on the translocation agreed that this was now the method of choice for the well-being of the animals.”
Security of rhinos is a major concern given the current poaching onslaught. Project partners receiving rhinos on their land are only chosen if their security systems are of a high standard. “Translocating rhinos always involves risk, but we cannot keep all our eggs in one basket. It is essential to manage black rhino populations for maximum growth as it is still a critically endangered species and this is what the project does by creating large new populations which we hope will breed quickly,” concludes Dr Flamand.
The WWF Black Rhino Range Expansion Project aims to increase the range and numbers of black rhino in South Africa and has created seven significant black rhino populations in eight years. Close to 120 black rhino have been translocated to date.
3:19
Curious Displays
Julia Yu Tsao
Graduate Thesis Project, Fall 2009
Media Design Program, Art Center College ...
published: 16 Feb 2010
author: Julia Tsao
Curious Displays
Julia Yu Tsao
Graduate Thesis Project, Fall 2009
Media Design Program, Art Center College of Design
http://juliatsao.com
http://cargocollective.com/juliatsao#263179/Curious-Displays
Animation in Maya, http://www.shadedbox.com.
Sound Design by Jason Chung, http://www.nosajthing.com.
Curious Displays functions simultaneously as a form of design research and as a proposal for a new product, a future display technology.
The project explores our relationship with devices and technology by examining the multi-dimensionality of communication and the complexity of social behavior and interaction. In its essence, the project functions as a piece of design fiction, considering the fluctuating nature of our present engagement with media technology and providing futurist imaginings of other ways of being.
Curious Displays is a product proposal for a new platform for display technology. Instead of a fixed form factor screen, the display surface is instead broken up into hundreds of ½ inch display blocks. Each block operates independently as a self-contained unit, and has full mobility, allowing movement across any physical surface. The blocks operate independently of one another, but are aware of the position and role relative to the rest of the system. With this awareness, the blocks are able to coordinate with the other blocks to reconfigure their positioning to form larger display surfaces and forms depending on purpose and function. In this way, the blocks become a physical embodiment of digital media, and act as a vehicle for the physical manifestation of what typically exists only in the virtual space of the screen.
Traditionally, displays are fixed-size/ratio surfaces that provide an entry point to a defined experience with digital media content. This content is varied--informational, filmic, auditory, at times even spatial. However, the relationship between the user and the digital entities within the defined surface of the screen creates a sense of fragmentation between two distinct spaces. The virtual space of the screen provides a surface for media content to come alive, but is a distinct and marked separation from the physical space that the user occupies.
Projection begins to create a kind of a hybrid space for the physical and virtual to blend. Projection can appear anywhere. It can appear on any surface at any given time, and can disappear again just as quickly, providing many space-saving benefits and new opportunities for mixed reality interaction and augmentation. However, the nature of such a transitory medium defies basic rules that are core to our understanding of the physical world. This begs the question of how virtual objects and entities can manifest themselves in the physical world without the "here one minute, gone the next" nature of the projection medium.
Curious Display "blocks" are tangible and tactile. They occupy and move through physical space, and are thus subject to the same spatial rules and limitations faced by any other physical objects. These constraints lend themselves to potentially interesting outcomes in terms of interactivity and negotiation. An abundance of questions quickly begin to surface--how do they move? How do they behave? Does this movement and behavior begin to allude to the development of a type of personality? How does one communicate with them? Where do they go when you're not using them? What role do they take on in our daily lives?
3:03
Mt Ruapehu Timelapse
UPDATE 2: If you want to continue to follow my work, I've moved. You can find my recent ...
published: 02 Sep 2011
author: Jared Brandon Productions
Mt Ruapehu Timelapse
UPDATE 2: If you want to continue to follow my work, I've moved. You can find my recent work here now :-)
www.perspectives.co.nz
www.facebook.com/perspectives.co.nz
www.vimeo.com/perspectivescinema
see you on the other side!
**************
UPDATE:
I've just written a post called "17 Things I Learnt Time-Lapsing the Milky-Way"
You can read it at the link below.
https://www.facebook.com/notes/jared-brandon-productions/17-things-i-learnt-time-lapsing-the-milky-way/266745530026365
*******************************************
Filmed over 12 days in August 2011, this is the Tongariro National Park by night.
Being a Wedding Filmmaker the winter is the down season for me so I took some time out to try my hand at time-lapse photography. This is my first attempt at filming time lapse's, And I soon found out filming the milky way at night gets a whole lot more tricky.
I had some new gear I had just purchased to try out so I was stoked to give that a go. I had a few gear issues on my first few nights but turns out it was more 'operator' issues and once I had learn't my lessons I was away flying!
I learn't so much over everyone of the 12 days filming. I had no idea how much work goes into creating a film like this. Preparation is so important and having good time management (which isn't always my strength) goes a long way to getting great footage. The sun, moon and milky way wait for no one. Then when you do finally get the timing right, the clouds get in the way. grrr. Ruined my moonrise!
All in all, I had an epic time and although improvements could have defiantly been made I'm stoked with what I achieved for my first attempt at this type of photography.
Technical Notes:
Most exposures ranged from 30-60 seconds at 1600ISO and spanned 2-4 hours. This gave me 4-8 seconds of time lapsed footage.
Captured on Canon DSLR's
EOS 550D
EOS 60D
EFS 10-22mm (80% of the film was captured with this lens)
EF 24mm f1.4L
EF 50mm f1.4
EF 70-200 f2.8L IS II
Manfrotto Tripod Legs and Heads.
Philip Bloom Pocket Dolly with elektraDRIVE motion control
DitoGear DryEye System (a must have for shooting at night)
One Eveready torch and a couple of LED Lamps to light up the foreground.
Music by M83: Moonchild
Buy it here: http://itunes.apple.com/us/album/moonchild/id46086466?i=46086387
Anyway I hope you like it!
Youtube results:
3:38
Basic Cloud Computing
This video covers the basics of cloud computing. For questions and for all the links used ...
published: 24 Jul 2009
author: gigafide
Basic Cloud Computing
This video covers the basics of cloud computing. For questions and for all the links used in this video, please visit the URL below: www.tinkernut.com
published: 24 Jul 2009
views: 225766
author:
gigafide
2:25
3D Operating System
Next Generation Operating System from Sun Micro Systems...
published: 17 Aug 2007
author: sibisrinivas
3D Operating System
Next Generation Operating System from Sun Micro Systems
published: 17 Aug 2007
views: 143112
author:
sibisrinivas
1:47
Computer Basics What is an operating system - Lesson 2.flv
...
published: 19 Feb 2010
author: moonsgirl909
Computer Basics What is an operating system - Lesson 2.flv
27:27
AT&T; Archives: The UNIX Operating System
Watch new AT&T; Archive films every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at techchannel.att.com In ...
published: 22 Feb 2012
author: ATTTechChannel
AT&T; Archives: The UNIX Operating System
Watch new AT&T; Archive films every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at techchannel.att.com In the late 1960s, Bell Laboratories computer scientists Dennis Ritchie and Ken Thompson started work on a project that was inspired by an operating system called Multics, a joint project of MIT, GE, and Bell Labs. The host and narrator of this film, Victor Vyssotsky, also had worked on the Multics project. Ritchie and Thompson, recognizing some of the problems with the Multics OS, set out to create a more useful, flexible, and portable system for programmers to work with. What's fascinating about the growth of UNIX is the long amount of time that it was given to develop, almost organically, and based on the needs of the users and programmers. The first installation of the program was done as late as 1972 (on a NY Telephone branch computer). It was in conjunction with the refinement of the C programming language, principally designed by Dennis Ritchie. Because the Bell System had limitations placed by the government that prevented them from selling software, UNIX was made available under license to universities and the government. This helped further its development, as well as making it a more "open" system. This film "The UNIX System: Making Computers More Productive", is one of two that Bell Labs made in 1982 about UNIX's significance, impact and usability. Even 10 years after its first installation, it's still an introduction to the system. The other film, "The UNIX System: Making ...
published: 22 Feb 2012
views: 42708
author:
ATTTechChannel