Virtual Tour of the Forbidden City

Thanks to $3 mil­lion dol­lars from IBM and three years of effort, you can now down­load a vir­tu­al tour of Chi­na’s For­bid­den City. Based on gam­ing soft­ware, the project lets you take a three dimen­sion­al tour of the impe­r­i­al palace built dur­ing the mid-Ming Dynasty, start­ing in 1406 (get more info here).

Update: This was orig­i­nal­ly post­ed in 2008. It looks like the vir­tu­al tour has been tak­en offline.

via Metafil­ter

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Morphing Van Gogh Portraits

You’ll get the con­cept of this pret­ty quick­ly. And if you’re a fan, see these oth­er clips (Women in Art & Women in Film). These cre­ative videos by Philip Scott John­son all reside in this larg­er YouTube col­lec­tion, which has now made it on to our our grow­ing list: Intel­li­gent Life at YouTube: 80 Edu­ca­tion­al Video Col­lec­tions.

 

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President Tours U.S To Survey Damage Caused By His Presidency

Yeah, okay, I am get­ting off track here with this com­ic bit from The Onion, veer­ing from cul­ture to pol­i­tics. Sor­ry for the detour. I will get back on track tomor­row. Real­ly, I will…

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Saturday Night Live on AIG’s Bottomless Chutzpah

It did­n’t take long for cor­po­rate Amer­i­ca to start brazen­ly shaft­ing the Amer­i­can tax­pay­er again. Just days after the gov­ern­ment spent $85 bil­lion bail­ing out AIG, the com­pa­ny shelled out $440,000 to send its execs to a South­ern Cal­i­for­nia resort. There a good $23,000 was spent on well-deserved spa treat­ments.

The cor­rup­tion has reached points where you just have to laugh (did you know that AIG’s CEO also gets a $5 mil­lion per­for­mance bonus?), and that’s what Sat­ur­day Night Live helps you do. Watch the video below and fast for­ward to the last two and a half min­utes.

PS In the com­ments, one of our read­ers has offered a defense of AIG. Your thoughts? 

 

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YouTube Starts Airing Full-Length TV Shows

First it was indie movies; now it’s clas­sic TV shows. Thanks to a deal with CBS, you can now watch clas­sic tele­vi­sion shows on YouTube.  Here, you’ll find Bev­er­ly Hills, 90210, Mac­Gyver, and even Star Trek â€” not exact­ly high-cul­ture, but you can’t win every time.

For more edi­fy­ing series of YouTube videos, see our piece: Intel­li­gent Life at YouTube: 75 Edu­ca­tion­al Video Col­lec­tions.

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Invitation to Stanford’s Course on the US Presidential Elections

Here’s a project that a few col­leagues and I have had some fun devel­op­ing. So it only seems fair that I get the scoop, right?

Start­ing on Octo­ber 15, you can fol­low a time­ly, free course pre­sent­ed by Stan­ford Uni­ver­si­ty. Led by Mar­tin Lewis, the course will explore the geog­ra­phy of U.S. pres­i­den­tial elec­tions (both past and present), and chal­lenge the sug­ges­tion that we are sim­ply divid­ed into a “Red Amer­i­ca” and “Blue Amer­i­ca.” It’s real­ly much more com­pli­cat­ed than that, as the intro­duc­to­ry video below makes pret­ty clear. (Get the iTunes ver­sion here.)

The course will run five weeks, and it will include a debrief after the Novem­ber elec­tion. A new video (run­ning between 90 and 120 min­utes) will be post­ed every Wednes­day on iTunes and YouTube. And we’ve set up a web site for the course where you’ll be able to inter­act with the pro­fes­sor, and where you can also find a lot more infor­ma­tion, includ­ing a com­plete course descrip­tion and read­ings for the course. Once the course gets start­ed, I will post a reminder. In the mean­time, I want­ed to give you an advanced heads up and hope­ful­ly whet your appetites a bit.

Last­ly, I should men­tion that this course comes out of Stan­ford’s fine Con­tin­u­ing Stud­ies pro­gram, and it will be even­tu­al­ly list­ed in our col­lec­tion of Free Cours­es.

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A Short Course in Behavioral Economics

Here’s a course for our his­tor­i­cal moment.…

Behav­ioral economics—“the study of how think­ing and emo­tions affect indi­vid­ual eco­nom­ic deci­sions and the behav­ior of markets”—is a rel­a­tive­ly new dis­ci­pline. This approach to eco­nom­ics, which mar­ries psy­chol­o­gy and eco­nom­ics and dis­cards the assump­tion that every eco­nom­ic actor is ratio­nal, was devel­oped part­ly by Richard Thaler, Direc­tor of the Cen­ter for Deci­sion Research at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Chica­go Grad­u­ate School of Busi­ness. Now, thanks to the Edge.org, you can fol­low a short class on the sub­ject. It’s taught by Thaler him­self and he’s joined by Har­vard econ­o­mist Send­hil Mul­lainathan and Nobel Lau­re­ate Daniel Kah­ne­man.

The course, deliv­ered in text and video, is being rolled out week­ly on the Edge web site in six install­ments. You can find Weeks 1 and 2 here and here. And you can check back for new install­ments here (scroll to the very bot­tom of the page.)

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And the 2008 Nobel Prize in Literature Goes To …

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Open Culture was founded by Dan Colman.