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YouTube EDU and iTunesU

An interesting article on TechCrunch today about YouTube EDU and iTunesU.

YouTube has reported on the one year anniversary of the launch of YouTube EDU:

MIT on YouTube EDU
Source: Brandon/YouTube EDU

MIT on YouTube EDU

YouTube EDU is now one of the largest online video repositories of higher education content in the world. We have tripled our partner base to over 300 universities and colleges, including University of Cambridge, Yale, Stanford, MIT, University of Chicago and The Indian Institutes of Technology. We have grown to include university courses in seven languages across 10 countries. We now have over 350 full courses, a 75% increase from a year ago and thousands of aspiring students have viewed EDU videos tens of millions of times. And today, the EDU video library stands at over 65,000 videos.

Source: YouTube. (2010, March 25). More Courses and More Colleges – YouTube EDU Turns One. Retrieved on March 25, 2010 from YouTube Website: http://youtube-global.blogspot.com/2010/03/more-courses-and-more-colleges-youtube.html

The TechCrunch article also lists the stats of iTunesU as 600 university partners and 250,000 videos.

SpokenMedia at OER10

Brandon Muramatsu presented on SpokenMedia at the OER10 Conference in Cambridge, UK on March 23, 2010.

Cite as: Muramatsu, B., McKinney, A. & Wilkins, P. (2010, March 23). Improving the OER Experience: Rich Media Notebooks of OER Video and Audio. Presentation at OER10: Cambridge, UK, March 23, 2010. Retrieved March 23, 2010 from Slideshare Web site: http://www.slideshare.net/bmuramatsu/improving-the-oer-experience-enabling-rich-media-notebooks-of-oer-video-and-audio

SpokenMedia at NERCOMP 2010

Brandon Muramatsu, Andrew McKinney and Peter Wilkins presented on SpokenMedia at the NERCOMP 2010 Conference in Providence, Rhode Island on March 9, 2010.

Cite as: Muramatsu, B., McKinney, A. & Wilkins, P. (2010, March 9). SpokenMedia: Automatic Lecture Transcription and Rich Media Notebooks. Presentation at NERCOMP 2010: Providence, Rhode Island, March 9, 2010. Retrieved March 9, 2010 from Slideshare Web site: http://www.slideshare.net/bmuramatsu/spokenmedia-automatic-lecture-transcription-and-rich-media-notebooks

IIHS Demo: How’d we do it?

Workflow Used in IIHS Demo
Source: Brandon Muramatsu

Workflow Used in IIHS Demo

Developer Posts

Hi all, we’re adding a new feature to the site…Developer posts. We’ll periodically write posts dealing with the development of the SpokenMedia project.

SpokenMedia and NPTEL: Initial Thoughts

During our trip to India in early January 2010, Brandon Muramatsu, Andrew McKinney and Vijay Kumar met with Prof. Mangala Sunder and the Indian National Programme on Technology Enhanced Learning (NPTEL) team at the Indian Institute of Technology-Madras.

The SpokenMedia project and NPTEL are in discussions to bring the automated lecture transcription process under development at MIT to NPTEL to:

  • Radically reduce transcription and captioning time (from 26 hours to as little as 2 hours).
  • Improve initial transcription accuracy via a research and development program.
  • Improve search and discovery of lecture video via transcripts.
  • Improve accessibility of video lectures for the diverse background of learners in India, and worldwide, via captioned video.

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SpokenMedia at the IIHS Curriculum Conference

Brandon Muramatsu and Andrew McKinney presented on SpokenMedia at the Indian Institute for Human Settlements (IIHS) Curriculum Conference in Bangalore, India on January 5, 2010.

Along with Peter Wilkins, we developed a demonstration of SpokenMedia technology using automatic lecture transcription to transcribe videos from IIHS. We developed a new JavaScript player that allowed us to view and search transcripts, and that supports transcripts in multiple languages. View the demo.

Cite as: Muramatsu, B., McKinney, A. & Wilkins, P. (2010, January 6). IIHS Open Framework-SpokenMedia. Presentation at the Indian Institute for Human Settlements Curriculum Conference: Bangalore, India, January 5, 2010. Retrieved January 23, 2010 from Slideshare Web site: http://www.slideshare.net/bmuramatsu/iihs-open-frameworkspoken-media

SpokenMedia at EdTech Fair

Brandon Muramatsu, Andrew McKinny and Phillip Long presented at the EdTech Fair at MIT in Cambridge, MA on October 14, 2009. We provided an on-going demonstration on the automated lecture transcription, search and playback functions of the SpokenMedia project.

Welcome to the SpokenMedia Project

Introduction The SpokenMedia Project is developing a software application suite/web-based service that automatically creates transcripts from academic-style lectures and provides the basis for a rich media notebook for learning. The system takes lecture media, in standard digital formats such as .mp4 and .mp3, and processes them to produce a searchable archive of digital video-/audio-based learning materials. The system allows for ad hoc retrieval of the media stream associated with a section of the audio track containing the target words or phrases. The system plays back the media, presenting the transcript of the spoken words synchronized with the speaker’s voice and marked by a cursor that follows along in sync with the lecture audio. The project’s goal is to increase the effectiveness of web-based lecture media by improving the search and discoverability of specific, relevant media segments and enabling users to interact with rich media segments in more educationally relevant ways.

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SpokenMedia: Content, Content Everywhere…What video? Where? at OpenEd 2009

Brandon Muramatsu presented on SpokenMedia at the Open Education 2009 Conference in August 2009 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

Cite as: Muramatsu, B. (2009). SpokenMedia: Content, Content Everywhere…What video? Where?: Improving the Discoverability of OER video and audio lectures. Presentation at the Open Education 2009: Vancouver, British Columbia, August 12, 2009. Retrieved August 17, 2009 from Slideshare Web site: http://www.slideshare.net/bmuramatsu/spokenmedia-content-content-everywherewhat-video-where-at-opened-2009#?type=presentation

In the uStream video below, the SpokenMedia presentation starts at about 19:30 in. The first part of the presentation is Mara Hancock from UC Berkeley talking about Opencast Matterhorn. (Unfortunately they forgot to start saving the stream at the start of her talk.)

Cite as: Muramatsu, B. (2009). SpokenMedia: Content, Content Everywhere…What video? Where? Presentation at Open Education 2009: Vancouver, British Columbia, August 12, 2009. Retrieved August 17, 2009 from uStream Web site: http://www.ustream.tv/flash/video/1972941

Creative Commons License Unless otherwise specified, the Spoken Media Website by the MIT Office of Digital Learning, Strategic Education Initiatives is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.