05:13
eSN TechWatch: Preparing Kids for 21st-Century Success -- May 19, 2008
Author Daniel Pink discusses what it will take for students to succeed in an outsourced and automated world—and how schools should change their approach to education accordingly.
In episode 122, Andy and Sean help you figure out what to do now the HD DVD/Blu-ray war is over.
We finally manage to get the video that we took to review the Intel Classmate PC up! We check out the design, the build and the power of the Intel Classmate PC!
In this episode Darren tours whatâs left of the Hakhouse and shares a emergency shutdown tip. Thatâs pretty much it. Life hit hard and weâre working at getting back on track. Send us some good mojo.
Dog in the dark. Unleashed is an animated comedy show that follows the trials and tribulations of animal actors in Hollywood. A new episode every Monday, here and at http://www.Unleashed.tv
09:56
TechNet Edge Series: Windows Server®2008 Failover Clustering
Demonstration uses six virtual machines all running on one laptop (domain controller, iSCSI SAN, three Server Core cluster nodes and a 2008 member server from which he runs the demo).
On the occasion of the Rundgang of the SpinnereiGalleries, there were three exhibitions that were opening at the same time. The Universal Cube presented works of the students of the Academy of Arts Linz.
The 'Car Talk' brothers, Tom and Ray Magliozzi, visit the UC Davis lab of Andy Frank, inventor of the plug-in hybrid, to learn more about one of the possible ways we can transition our transportation system of off oil. Watch NOVA every Tuesday night on PBS. Or join us online at http://www.pbs.org/nova Funding for NOVA is provided by David H. Koch, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and public television viewers. To learn more, visit http://www.pbs.org/nova/car
How many of us have dreamed of a life in utensil-based music? (Featuring Sandy Marshall of the Chicago sketch group Schadenfreude.)
Want to challenge the filmmakers who spend millions of dollars on their films, yet, still have the nerve to call themselves indie? Pick up a 35mm adapter or build one yourself and you can give your movies that "film look" and start being taken more seriously!
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