Courses
Projectile motion, mechanics and electricity and magnetism. Solid understanding of algebra and a basic understanding of trigonometry necessary.

Introduction to probability. Independent and dependent events. Compound events. Mutual exclusive events. Addition rule for probability.

Statistics is about extracting meaning from data. In this class, we will introduce techniques for visualizing relationships in data and systematic techniques for understanding the relationships using mathematics. This course does not require any previous knowledge of statistics. Basic familiarity with algebra such as knowing how to compute the mean, median and mode of a set of numbers will be helpful. This course will cover visualization, probability, regression and other topics that will help you learn the basic methods of understanding data with statistics.


This class teaches you about basic concepts in theoretical computer science -- such as NP-completeness -- and what they imply for solving tough algorithmic problems. You should have a basic understanding of algorithms (such as CS215) and programming (such as CS101). No prior knowledge about theoretical computer science required! At the end of this course, you will have a solid understanding of theoretical computer science. This will not only allow you to recognize some of the most challenging algorithmic problems out there, but also give you powerful tools to deal with them in practice.





iOS 6 App Development Fundamentals LiveLessons is unique among iOS videos published today--it's the only one that takes a complete "app-driven" approach to teaching iOS programming. Expert video instructor Paul Deitel teaches key iOS 6 concept in the context of fully coded and tested iOS 6 apps. You learn iOS 6 as you build great iOS 6 Apps! This LiveLesson is ideal for people familiar with object-oriented programming in Java, C++, C# or Objective-C (an Objective-C background is not required).

