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What are your favorite online lectures, presentations and talks?

A few rules:

  • Must be programming or software related.
  • try to keep this non-academic. There are many online academic lectures, but let's try and keep this fun.
  • try to post freely available stuff (YouTube, etc...)
  • try to post specific talks, not just "google talks have good things...". As much as that is true :)
  • feel free to edit, this is wiki :)

Main goal is to make this a wiki post summarizing the best online lectures.

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Why non-academic? – docgnome Jun 13 at 20:16
Dupe: stackoverflow.com/questions/34662/… – Jonathan Sampson Aug 28 at 12:27

16 Answers

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Sometimes when I get an episode of OCD I arrange videos I like into YouTube playlists. These might be interesting:

I wouldn't do a very good job answering if I didn't point you to InfoQ. There are some great videos there. Also see these related (bordering on duplicate) SO questions:

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vote up 9 vote down

My favorites are:

These are all non-academic, so enjoy!

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The Raymond Chen talk seems to be unavailable...any idea where another copy might be had? – drewh Mar 19 at 13:10
The video is available if you click on one of the download links below the video player. However, the audio is nearly useless. – Agnel Kurian Aug 22 at 17:44
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Abelson and Sussman's 1986 lectures based on the Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs. You can download the lectures here.

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I wouldn't consider this as non-academic, as the poster asked. – compie Mar 17 at 15:45
But it hits the "fun" requirement. :-) – Dustin Campbell Mar 17 at 18:44
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I can't think of one better than this

Last Lecture

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The Google tech talks are usually pretty good.

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"try to post specific talks, not just "google talks have good things...". As much as that is true :)" – Arve Systad May 18 at 15:01
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I think most TED talks are outstanding. They're not only about programming and software, though. Have a look at those talks tagged "software".

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TED is great, but sometimes the time limit makes it difficult for the speakers to include a lot of detail. What I like to do is if I find an intruguing TED talk, I google the speaker for more talks/presentations by them. – Andy Leekman May 3 at 19:25
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Luca's F# talk at PDC2008 is a fantastic intro the the language.

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Currently, my favorites:

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The Belgian Java User Group - http://www.parleys.com - have a nice library of different Java related presentations made on different Java conventions, like JavaPolis, SpringOne, Devoxx, and so on. Worth to check out if you're interested in different Java solutions and frameworks!

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Check this out: http://webcast.berkeley.edu/courses.php

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Knuth's Computer Musings, especially the "Aha" sessions recorded during one semester of his problem solving course.

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Anything by Herb Sutter is usually good. I've watched his talks on the concurrency revolution, but also his talk here on machine architecture is very interesting.

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Ars Digita videos

These are academic, but I enjoyed them so much I'm posting it in case someone isn't aware of them yet. Enormously entertaining and instructive. 11 courses and some ancillary material.

From the site:

ArsDigita University was a one-year, intensive post-baccalaureate program in Computer Science based on the undergraduate course of study at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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I enjoy John Carmack's Quakecon Keynotes, in particular the 2007 keynote. It's really geeky, but educational if you are into computers, video games and rocket ships.

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Channel 9 from MSDN

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Unfortunately last time i looked into Channel 9 it was using silver light :S – Annerajb Oct 16 at 13:34
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Lecturefox has a huge list of IT related lectures (both video and audio).

If you didn't know about Youtube's EDU directory it has a huge amount of online video'd lectures for Universities. The first ones I found:

Unfortunately there's no UK university's on there that I could find.

One other set that I'll add is Steven Skiena's lectures (author of the Algorithm Design Manual)

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