DarthDooku Posted July 28, 2004 Posted July 28, 2004 Are there any other good sites like this for self education.
bloodhound Posted July 28, 2004 Posted July 28, 2004 most of the stuff in wikipedia are written by pple who dont know what the hell they on about. its quite enjoyable read though
ydoaPs Posted July 28, 2004 Posted July 28, 2004 there's a really good place for stuff like that. what's it called... o yeah. I'ts a LIBRARY.
Cap'n Refsmmat Posted July 28, 2004 Posted July 28, 2004 most of the stuff in wikipedia are written by pple who dont know what the hell they on about. its quite enjoyable read though I've never seen anything like that on the Wikipedia.
JaKiri Posted July 28, 2004 Posted July 28, 2004 most of the stuff in wikipedia are written by pple who dont know what the hell they on about. its quite enjoyable read though I find it to be reasonably reliable, although as its community written it's not a definitive source.
ed84c Posted July 28, 2004 Posted July 28, 2004 Search for calculus help there are some flash animations with a guy talking you through it, very good ones. I would give a thumb up sign now if i knew how without 'going advanced'...........
DarthDooku Posted July 28, 2004 Author Posted July 28, 2004 Libraries are crap. All the books are ten or fifteen years old. Wikipedia seems pretty good so far, but some of the things they explain are confusing and not very specific.
ydoaPs Posted July 29, 2004 Posted July 29, 2004 u can't judge all libraries by your experience with one. anyway go to borders. do you have any problem with borders?
Lance Posted July 29, 2004 Posted July 29, 2004 [insert witty comment about problems with physical borders] I would have to agree with him on the library issue. If you want anything up to date it’s the wrong place to look. Or if you want anything obscure theres no possible way its going to be in your little library.
DarthDooku Posted July 29, 2004 Author Posted July 29, 2004 u can't judge all libraries by your experience with one. anyway go to borders. do you have any problem with borders? Well, ive been to about 5 or 6 libraries in my area and they all have the same crap. I could go to Borders, but i dont have $100 bucks to spend on a book. And they probably wouldnt have anything for educational purposes. Probably a lot of Hubble Telescope picture books.
Dave Posted July 29, 2004 Posted July 29, 2004 Lucky you. I'd request that you be less patronising in future, because people will only laugh when you're wrong. Back on topic, I think your best bet is to google for the type of thing that you're interested in, there's lots of useful resources around.
admiral_ju00 Posted July 29, 2004 Posted July 29, 2004 Well, ive been to about 5 or 6 libraries in my area and they all have the same crap. I could go to Borders, but i dont have $100 bucks to spend on a book. And they probably wouldnt have anything for educational purposes. Probably a lot of Hubble Telescope picture books. I don't particularly like their magazine, but this site is very good when it comes to buying quality books. I've now been a member for over a year and the books that they cary are quite good. Plus you get that introductory offer of buying the 1st 3 books at 1.99 each, ofcourse you don't get to see their Best selections 'till you're actually a member. The catch is the same if you've ever seen or been a member of those DVD or CD selling companies, where you buy these 3 books for 9 bucks(by the way, both Greene's books are there and can be had for 1.99 each), you'll need to buy 3 more books in the next 2 years at a regular Members price. That price is in itself a lot cheaper than Barnes and Noble. I despise Borders, by the way. http://www.sciambookclub.com/doc/club_url/club_url.jhtml;jsessionid=WZNN35YNGJTWMCTI4ENCFGA?_requestid=48747
[Tycho?] Posted July 29, 2004 Posted July 29, 2004 most of the stuff in wikipedia are written by pple who dont know what the hell they on about. its quite enjoyable read though Umm, no, thats not true. I am reading at this very moment stuff on electromagnetism, and it gets into very advanced stuff, such that I sometimes have to look elsewhere for a simpler explanation.
Sayonara Posted July 29, 2004 Posted July 29, 2004 I doubt that the entries on electromagnetism would qualify as "most" in that sentence you quoted. I find it to be variable quality, but 1,000,000 times better than dictionary.com or anything by Websters.
[Tycho?] Posted July 29, 2004 Posted July 29, 2004 I doubt that the entries on electromagnetism would qualify as "most" in that sentence you quoted. Thats true, of course. But I use the random page feature every day, and the articles are usually quite good. The information is almost always accurate, the problems arise when an article is too short, or not written particularly well. But almost all the articles link to offsite pages as well. So basically, over 95% of wikipedia that I have read has been written by people who know what they are talking about.
Sayonara Posted July 29, 2004 Posted July 29, 2004 By "accurate" I take it you mean that the articles agree with the information you currently store.
DarthDooku Posted July 30, 2004 Author Posted July 30, 2004 I don't particularly like their magazine' date=' but this site is very good when it comes to buying quality books. I've now been a member for over a year and the books that they cary are quite good. Plus you get that introductory offer of buying the 1st 3 books at 1.99 each, ofcourse you don't get to see their Best selections 'till you're actually a member. The catch is the same if you've ever seen or been a member of those DVD or CD selling companies, where you buy these 3 books for 9 bucks(by the way, both Greene's books are there and can be had for 1.99 each), you'll need to buy 3 more books in the next 2 years at a regular [b']Members[/b] price. That price is in itself a lot cheaper than Barnes and Noble. I despise Borders, by the way. http://www.sciambookclub.com/doc/club_url/club_url.jhtml;jsessionid=WZNN35YNGJTWMCTI4ENCFGA?_requestid=48747 Im actually a member of SciAm book club. I just wish i had more money to spend, cause they do have a lot of books that i want. What would be great is if there was a place i could buy high school and college text books. Then i would save up my money. Does anyone know how i could get some textbooks, without having a college ID card.
Lance Posted July 30, 2004 Posted July 30, 2004 I think you can get used text books on half.com. Amazon.com also has new and used text books.
ydoaPs Posted July 30, 2004 Posted July 30, 2004 my high school just got a new set of algebra 2, precalc/trig, and AP calc books. i guess that wouldn't help you much unless u lived near my school.
ydoaPs Posted July 30, 2004 Posted July 30, 2004 the office number is (317) 398-9731. they might fed ex them to you if you ask.
admiral_ju00 Posted July 30, 2004 Posted July 30, 2004 Does anyone know how i could get some textbooks, without having a college ID card. Interesting. My uni does not check the ID if you're using the bookstore on it's campus. Others, yes.
dagaz Posted July 30, 2004 Posted July 30, 2004 Another good web resource is Scirus - the science search engine.
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