RefBan

Referral Banners

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Obama considering executive action on guns, flu season likely worst in decade, and other stories from The Slatest.

Trouble viewing this email? View these recent stories in your browser.
 
header
Wednesday, January 09, 2013

What you may have missed from The Slatest, your news companion.

Blog | Daniel Politi
VP Biden: Obama Won't Wait for Congress To Take Action on Gun Violence
Wednesday, January 09, 2013, at 5:46 PM EST

 
Blog | Daniel Politi
AIG Won't Join Lawsuit Against U.S. Government
Wednesday, January 09, 2013, at 3:30 PM EST

 
Blog | Daniel Politi
Attorney General Eric Holder Staying On, Labor Secretary Hilda Solis Steps Down
Wednesday, January 09, 2013, at 5:15 PM EST

 
Blog | Matthew Yglesias
With Lew, Obama Takes a Fiscal Turn at the Treasury Department
Wednesday, January 09, 2013, at 1:34 PM EST

 
Blog | Daniel Politi
U.S. Flu Season Likely To Be Worst in a Decade
Wednesday, January 09, 2013, at 1:36 PM EST

 
Blog | Daniel Politi
Around 70 Injured in Manhattan Ferry Crash
Wednesday, January 09, 2013, at 4:30 PM EST

 
Blog | Abby Ohlheiser
Majority of Americans Will Pay Someone Else To Fill Out Tax Returns This Year
Wednesday, January 09, 2013, at 3:07 PM EST

 
Blog | Daniel Politi
Spiritual People Are More Likely To Face Mental Health Issues, Use Drugs
Wednesday, January 09, 2013, at 2:43 PM EST

 
Blog | Katy Waldman
Can Richard Blanco Write a Great Inaugural Poem? Can Anyone?
Wednesday, January 09, 2013, at 3:32 PM EST

 
Blog | Daniel Politi
White House Responds to Petition Demanding Deportation of Piers Morgan
Wednesday, January 09, 2013, at 4:21 PM EST

 
Blog | Daniel Politi
Is U.S. Playing Expectations Game By Floating Idea of Zero Troops for Afghanistan?
Wednesday, January 09, 2013, at 10:23 AM EST

 
Blog | David Haglund
Hear Previously Unreleased Hendrix
Wednesday, January 09, 2013, at 4:53 PM EST

 
BEST FEATURED STORIES
header
A Ringing Defeat for Stop-and-Frisk and a Huge Win for Civil Liberties
header
Michele Bachmann Wrote Another Bill To Repeal Obamacare. No One Will Go Near It.
header
Forget Overcrowding. The World Population Could Start Declining.
header
In Defense of Zooey Deschanel
 
Copyright 2013 The Slate Group | Privacy Policy
The Slate Group | c/o E-mail Customer Care | 1350 Connecticut Avenue NW Suite 410 | Washington, D.C. 20036

Unsubscribe | Forward to a Friend
 

Plan Your Free Online Education at Lifehacker U: Spring Semester 2013

January 9th, 2013Top Story

Plan Your Free Online Education at Lifehacker U: Spring Semester 2013

By Alan Henry

Plan Your Free Online Education at Lifehacker U: Spring Semester 2013 Your education doesn't have to stop once you leave school—freedom from the classroom just means you have more control over what you learn and when you learn it. We've put together a curriculum of some of the best free online classes available on the web this spring for our fourth term of Lifehacker U, our regularly-updating guide to improving your life with free, online college-level classes. Let's get started.

Orientation: What Is Lifehacker U?

There's still a chill in the air, but it's not too soon to pick out your classes for when the weather starts to warm again and the trees start to grow leaves again. Bundle up if you go out, but if you stay in with your computer, there are an incredible amount of free, university-level courses that become available on the web every school year, and anyone with a little time and a passion for self-growth can audit, read, and "enroll" in these courses for their own personal benefit. Schools like Yale University, MIT, Stanford, the University of California at Berkeley, and many more are all offering free online classes that you can audit and participate in from the comfort of your office chair, couch, or computing chair-of-choice.

If you'll remember from our Fall 2012 semester, some of these classes are available year-round, but many of them are only available during the a specific term or semester, and because we're all about helping you improve your life at Lifehacker, we put together a list of courses available this fall that will inspire you, challenge you, open the door to something new, and give you the tools to improve your life. Grab your pen and paper and make sure your battery is charged—class is in session!


Plan Your Free Online Education at Lifehacker U: Spring Semester 2013

Computer Science and Technology

  • University of Washington - Introduction to Computer Networks - Professors Arvind Krishnamurthy, David Wetherall, and John Zahorjan - Computer science and technology isn't all programming—sometimes it's about how computer systems relate to one another, and this University of Washington course helps break down the concepts that many of us take for granted in common sense terms that are easily understood. This course will introduce you to concepts like DNS, 802.11 and its lettered protocols, TCP/IP, HTTP, SSL, and more. Additionally, you'll get an understanding of how computer networks are designed for reliability and redundancy, and how the internet works. You'll also get to design your own semi-hosted social networking application for your Android device by the end of the class.
  • MIT - Introduction to C++ - Professors Jesse Dunietz, Geza Kovacs, and John Marrero - If you're looking for a good starter programming language, C++ is a good one to pick. A number of university computer science programs still begin with C++, mostly as it's a relatively easy language to learn and offers some foundational concepts that you'll need for more frequently used and more complicated languages you'll encounter later on. This MIT course is designed to be a rapid introduction to the language for people with little to no programming experience at all (although if you have experience, it'll be easier.) You won't need a lot of prerequisites here, but if you've been itching to learn to code, this course can help you do it at your own pace..
  • Udacity - Programming Languages (CS262) - Professor Westley Weimer - Maybe you're interested in computer science and programming, but you don't really have a grasp on all the languages out there to learn. Perhaps you're familiar with a language or two, but daunted by others. This course will help you cut through the fog and give you the fundamentals required to pick up any programming language. You won't focus on just one language here—rather, the concepts necessary to understand programming in general so you're never faced with a language you can't use logic to interpret.
  • University of California, Berkeley - CS184.1x: Foundations of Computer Graphics - Professor Ravi Ramamoorthi - If you're ready to get your hands into how computer graphics are generated, or if you've followed along with our 3D Modeling Night School and would like to learn more, this Berkeley course is for you. You'll need some math skills and an understanding of C or C++ to keep up with the class, but if you have it, this course will teach you the fundamentals that a lot of "computer graphics" and "video game school" classes won't teach you—raytracing, OpenGL, transformations, and more. If you've ever thought you were interested in game design or development, this course can offer a few skills that will serve you well in the long term, not just how to handle a specific application or dev package.
  • Carnegie Mellon University - Principles of Computing - The course description for this class points out that their goal is to show students that there's more to computer science than simply writing code, and rightfully so. In this course you'll learn very elementary and conceptual principles of computing, like iterative processes, how data is represented in binary, recursion and recursive processes, encryption and data security, and more.
  • Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology - Android Development - Professor David Fisher - We highlighted Professor Fisher's CSSE490 Android Development course last term, but it's been updated since then and is definitely worth a fresh look. The full course from Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology will help you learn how to build Android applications from start to finish, from design and development to UI. The self-paced, skill-based lessons will help you build your first Android app quickly, and if you get lost, you can pick up supporting documentation on the web. We've linked to the most recent iteration of the course, but you can check out the previous version (with videos) at the 2011 course's website, or over at Fisher's YouTube channel.
  • MIT - Information and Entropy - Professors Paul Penfield and Seth Lloyd - This course aims to explore the ultimate limits of data communication technology, from the breakdown of digital signals and physical technologies, data compression, and more. You'll explore topics like biological representations of information systems, computing architectures, noise, error correction, and even quantum computation and the possibilities it holds over the course of the class. Of course, you'll also be introduced to the concept of entropy in terms of the Second Law of Thermodynamics, and how it applies to information technology.

Plan Your Free Online Education at Lifehacker U: Spring Semester 2013

Finance and Economics

  • University of California, Irvine - Fundamentals of Personal Financial Planning - Avi Pai - If you've been looking to get your finances in check, or if your budget is an excel spreadsheet or text document that you look at every now and again, this course (updated since the last time we featured it) is ideal for you. Taught by a Certified Financial Planner, this course will help you set financial goals for your future, for retirement, and for personal spending and other things you want. You'll learn how to save money so it's painless, how to pay yourself first, and how to weave through complicated topics like taxes, investments, and insurance so they're no longer mysteries that you just accept when they hit your bank account. Most importantly, you'll get an understanding of personal finance that goes beyond just saving money, but where your money goes, why, and how to make the most of it.
  • Missouri State University - Personal Finance (iTunes U) - It's a bit elementary, but everyone has to start somewhere. If you're having trouble even setting a budget or getting started with the concept of credit and goal-setting, this is a great and completely free primer to help you get started. If you've been managing your own finances up to this point, you may not learn anything new, but it's at the very least informative if you've been flying by the seat of your pants.
  • The Open University - You and Your Money: Personal Finance in Context (DB123) - Consumer debt is one of the biggest personal finance challenges most people struggle with, and this course from The Open University aims to put that struggle front and center. The course examines how many people wrangle with their debt every day, and then offers up a complete picture of how debt—especially consumer debt—plays a role in larger economies.
  • Liberty University - Financial Coaching (iTunes U) - If you want to help other people learn to manage their money, or you just want to pick up a couple of tricks you may not already know, Liberty University's course in financial coaching and mentoring is worth subscribing to. You'll learn about the time value of money, the psychology of money and what leads people to make irrational decisions about it, how to handle major purchases like automobiles and homes, how to develop flexible and dynamic spending plans, and how to build retirement plans, all in just over a dozen 45-minute installments.
  • University of Florida - Economic Issues, Food, and You - Professor Jennifer Clark - Economics plays a significant role in the production, growth, and distribution of food around the world, and not just in the "farmers and producers need to make money" way either. This course examines the way economic factors influence the environment, food prices, government and regulatory policies, labor and food distribution. By the end of the class, you'll have a better understanding of how scarcity and the rules of supply and demand determine whether or not the avocados at your supermarket are fresh or harvested entirely too early.
  • The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania - Corporate Finance - Professor Franklin Allen - Personal finance is the study of how economics effect you and how you should manage your money, but corporate finance aims to help you understand how businesses have to navigate a complicated maze of taxation, regulation, investment, and revenue. They do this while simultaneously being held accountable by the community in which they reside and the shareholders and employees who all have some stake in the company in some form. This course will help introduce you to business finance and those complexities, including the mathematics that makes those balance sheets tick, from concepts like present value and capital budgeting to risk assessment and statistics.

Plan Your Free Online Education at Lifehacker U: Spring Semester 2013

Science and Medicine

  • Udacity - Introduction to Physics - Professor Andy Brown - Have you ever wanted to visit Europe? Have you ever wanted to understand some of the basic physical concepts that explain how gravity works, or how we can measure the circumference of the Earth while we're standing on it? This course will take you abroad to locations in Italy, the UK, and the Netherlands where some of the most basic, fundamental laws of Physics were puzzled out, all with real world experiments that you can follow along with. You don't need much math here—some basic algebra will suffice, but the real thrill will be in seeing and understanding things like how objects move, what causes motion, and what electricity is. You'll even tackle modern questions and concepts in Physics today.
  • The Open University - The Fundamental Forces of the Universe (iTunes U) - From electromagnetism to gravity, this course from The Open University is a primer to the physical forces that govern the the interations of matter in the universe for non-technical audiences. The video lessons will help you understand the practical implications and observations of these interactions in the real world, and by the end of the course you'll have an understanding of how experiments at facilities like the Large Hadron Collider are performed, as well as the forces at work in places like the cores of stars.
  • The University of Edinburgh - Astrobiology and the Search for Extraterrestrial Life - Professor Charles Cockell - Right now is an incredible time for astrobiologists. More and more earth-like planets are being discovered every day, with astronomers saying our galaxy could be crowded with billions of them. This course will get you up to speed on the current state of the search for extraterrestrial life, and what that really means and what reasonable scientists think they may find out there. The course starts with an understanding of how life even manages to persist in some of the most extreme and inhospitable environments here on Earth, environments that are equally common elsewhere in the universe, and what extraterrestrial life may look like when we actually find it. To boot, the course also gets into the concept of intelligent alien life and the implications of its detection.
  • Yale University - BENG 100: Frontiers of Biomedical Engineering - Professor W. Mark Saltzman - If topics like clinical trials, FDA approval, and advances in medicine and drug development interest you, this course is worth a look. Professor Saltzman walks you through how drugs are tested, developed, and ultimately approved, and in this case he examines some specific case studies to help you understand the often lengthy and test-heavy process that takes a drug from a test bench to a store shelf. The course also discusses recent advances in medical testing and biomedical engineering—which in many cases is the science of using biological processes, tissues, and organs to treat human conditions.
  • Duke University - Introduction to Human Physiology - Professors Emma Jakoi and Jennifer Carbrey - If you've ever wondered exactly how the human body works to keep all of its systems working and interacting in harmony, this intro to human physiology and anatomy will help you get a grip on the topic. You'll learn about the body's various systems, from the nervous to the circulatory to the endocrine, and you'll get a better understanding of how those systems operate and communicate with one another to create a single living machine. The course is aimed at students with some understanding or background in human biology and aiming at careers in physical therapy or nursing, so keep that in mind when you sign up.
  • Yale University - MCDB 150: Global Problems of Population Growth - Professor Robert Wyman - Global population growth is a huge issue, one that most nations (not to mention the world as a whole) have no idea how to address. This course will highlight some of the major issues of the world's growing population, especially in developing countries where populations are booming the most. Additionally, the course will examine human fertility, the cultural causes of demographic change, environmental sustainability, and of course the political, ethical, and religious issues around population growth and planning. The course is global in nature, so while there'll be some focus on growing developing nations, there'll also be conversations about the contracting populations of some developed nations.

Plan Your Free Online Education at Lifehacker U: Spring Semester 2013

Mathematics

  • University of California, Irvine - Algebra - Professors Sarah Eichhorn and Rachel Cohen Lehman - A number of the mathematics classes we've focused on in the past have been conceptual in nature, aiming to teach you some math based on real world experiments or exercises. This term, we're going right for the basics with some serious math classes that will teach you the real skills and theory you need for more advanced topics, starting with Algebra. If your skills are rusty from high school, or you just never got a chance to master Algebra, this self-paced course will help you learn what you need to know. You'll start with the basics: variables, exponents, radicals. You'll eventually move through polynomials, graphing, coordinates, and quadratic functions. This is the real deal, so get ready to exercise your brain.
  • The Ohio State University - Calculus One - Professor Jim Fowler - Calculus is required for a number of scientific concepts, from biology to astrophysics, and a number of the courses we highlight at Lifehacker U are much easier if you have some basic understanding of calculus. If you took high school algebra (or the algebra class we just mentioned!), you're already ready for this class. You'll begin with real-world examples of calculus in action, and Dr Fowler walks you through how the seemingly symbolic mathematics in calculus explain so many behaviors and observations in our everyday lives. By the end of the course, you'll be taking derivatives and doing integrals with the best of them.
  • TED - Statistics: Visualizing Data (iTunes U) - This podcast series features a number of TED talks from people like Hans Roy, Nic Marks, and Nathalie Miebach, all explaining how statistics—a concept so often used as a means to an end—is visible everywhere in the world, from storms to art to information design and more. By the end of this series, you'll have a new appreciation for statistics and data collection, and you'll be able to understand how those numbers are gathered, processed, and presented in the best possible way.
  • The Open University/BBC - The Code - The Code is actually a television series produced by The Open University and the BBC about mathematics in the real world. In the show, a "secret code" lies at the underpinnings of the universe and how it works, how forces much larger than us move, and how forces much smaller than we are interact. Over the course of the documentary, supplemented by a selection of games and exercises that are fun to play, you'll unravel "the code" and begin to understand how mathematics truly is the one and only universal language.


Plan Your Free Online Education at Lifehacker U: Spring Semester 2013

Social Sciences, Classics, and Humanities

  • Wesleyan University - The Modern and the Postmodern - Professor Michael S. Roth - Have you ever really wondered what terms like "modern" and "postmodern" really mean when they're thrown about in terms of design and architecture? This course examines when "modern" became a commonly used phrase—namely at the end of the 1800s—and what it meant at that time to be "progressive" or "hip" and "modern." Times changed, and so did opinions, thus the rise of "postmodern," but the concepts that underpin both phrases are standards in the way we interpret, examine, and analyze culture and cultural change everywhere in the world—and have been for the past 200 years.
  • Harvard - PH278x: Human Health and Global Environmental Change - Professors Aaron Bernstein and Jack Spengler - Global environmental change is one of the biggest challenges of our time, and left unchecked, there may be more than vanishing coastlines and rising sea levels to adapt to. This course examines the human health concerns that tie into climate change around the globe, including biodiversity loss, which can impact the health of billions of people worldwide and create new habitats for illnesses and disease vectors that were never present in the past. The course also examines the challenge for health professionals around the world to adapt to a changing environment, and challenges us, the students, to think about solutions to the problem.
  • The University of Pennsylvania - Health Policy and The Affordable Care Act - Professor Ezekiel Emanuel, MD - The Affordable Care Act, or the landmark health care legislation that was passed by the US Congress and signed into law by the President in 2010, has wide reaching implications for the US health care system. This course examines health policy and the state of health care in the United States prior to the passing of the law and today, with projections for the impact the law will have in the future and changes that we'll see in our health care system in the coming years. The course will also walk along the road to health care reform, along with all of the pros and cons of everything from employee-sponsored health insurance to a single-payer system, and is designed for anyone who wants a broader knowledge of how health care in the United States works, its history, and its future.
  • Harvard University - CB22x: The Ancient Greek Hero - Professor Gregory Nagy - From Homer's Illiad and Odyssey to Blade Runner, this course takes us back and forth through time to examine the Greek Hero, his attributes, his flaws, and his story, and how that same story has been told, adapted, and retold over thousands of years. The course starts with the Homeric poems, and walks through ancient literature like the songs of Sappho all the way up to present day treatments of the epic hero and the cult of the hero that, to this day, surrounds our natural love for brave and endearing protagonists that we can relate to. You need no background in Greek civilization or culture to enjoy this course, but by the time you're finished, you'll be curious all about it.
  • MIT - Consumer Culture - Professor Karen Boiko - This course is a little dated, but it's still an excellent primer to the issues that we face every day, especially in technology. The class examines what exactly it means to live "the good life," filled with the products and services that make our lives easier, more efficient, and overall happier—but never seem to put an end to our desire for more. Dr. Bioko examines the culture of consumption, from shopping and spending money for more things to the desire for all the free services and products that can possibly sign up for. The course shows us the intersection of marketing and our innate desire to avoid scarcity, and how other people, companies, and organizations prey on those human instincts.<.li>


Plan Your Free Online Education at Lifehacker U: Spring Semester 2013

Law

  • Harvard University - HLS1x: Copyright - Professor William Fisher III - This new, highly experimental course aims to teach copyright law to people who have no background in copyright or in intellectual property ownership. The course explores the law, theory, and practice of copyright, and the concept of ownership. It's worth noting that this class is a true class-meaning online sessions are limited to 500 participants that meet regularly for a set period of time every week for their classes. Currently registration is closed, but keep an eye on this course, slots may open up so you can apply, and another course may open up due to incredibly high demand.
  • Harvard University - Justice - Professor Michael Sandel - Nearly a thousand students pack the lecture halls at Harvard every year to hear Dr. Sandel talk about justice, and how the concept has evolved and changed over the millennia. The ethics of fair treatment, the beginnings of the justice system, the line between the freedom to choose and the responsibility of the state to protect, the moral side of murder, and even a good conversation about cannibalism are all integral to the topic at hand and discussed in this wide-reaching course. By the end, you may find yourself questioning some of your longest held beliefs, and that's a good thing—confirmation bias will not be well served in this class.
  • The Open University - Justice, Vengeance, and Forgiveness (iTunes U) - The law and justice is more than just a process of society punishing criminals for violating our social norms, it's also an intricate process of forgiveness, rehabilitation, and ultimately social vengence against those who have committed crimes against us. This course examines those topics, along with what exactly we mean as a society when we discuss "justice," and different interpretations of the best approach to criminal justice, from ancient societies to today.
  • Liberty University - Computer and Cyber Forensics (iTunes U) - This podcast series will examine federal information security and cyber crime laws, examine case studies in cyber forensics, ethical considerations as an investigator in digital forensics, and the tools of the trade. If you've been interested in getting involved with information forensics and the legal concepts surrounding the discipline, this crash course is worth a look.

Plan Your Free Online Education at Lifehacker U: Spring Semester 2013

Cross-Disciplinary Courses and Seminars

  • Udacity - HTML5 Game Development (CS255) - Professors Colt McAnlis, Peter Lubbers, and Sean Bennett - If you're interested in game development, especially for the web, this class is a must-take. It hasn't started yet and there's still time to sign up to take it as it's being offered, but over the course of the class, you'll learn how to build an HTML5-based game, and actually build one yourself before the end of the class. You'll walk away with the principles required to build your own, including 2D canvasing and techniques to improve game performance for your players.
  • University of Michigan - Fantasy and Science Fiction: The Human Mind, Our Modern World - Professor Eric Rabkin - If you're a science fiction fan or fantasy buff, this class will help you understand not just why you're so drawn to the genre personally, but also why sci-fi and fantasy have such a profound impact on society as a whole. Every culture around the globe has their own fantasy stories and science fiction adapted stories, in many cases because they say a lot about our societies and about human nature as a whole. This course examines those stories, from Mary Shelley's Frankenstein to Avatar.
  • University of Virginia - Know Thyself - Professor Mitchell Green - According to the course, the Delphic Oracle had two oft-repeated messages for those who would seek her advice: "Nothing in excess," and "Know thyself." This course aims to examine the latter in terms of philosophy, psychology, religion, neuroscience, and virtually any other angle you can possibly attempt to understand your own true "self," from the idea that the "self" isn't a real thing all the way to the concept of the self-protecting "ego" that fights against your better judgement at all costs. The course also aims to test the limits of one's possible understanding of oneself from a philosophical perspective.
  • MIT - Introduction to Videogame Studies - Professor Clara Fernandez-Vara - This look at videogames is more than just a crash course in playing them, but also in the art and design of gaming, the aesthetics of video games, the economy of video games and entertainment, and more. The course will challenge you to not just play video games, but to do so after reading current research into the industry and its mechanisms and influences. No programming is required.
  • The University of London - The Camera Never Lies - Professor Emmett Sullivan - This course, like its name, examines historical documentation and interpretation in an age of film, photographs, and modern photojournalism. The course also discusses films and movies based on actual historical events and how those movies, documentary and fiction alike, shape our perspectives on what really happened. The course will also touch on issues of authenticity and the manipulation of photos and film going back generations.

Extra Credit: How To Find Your Own Online Classes

The cirriculum at Lifehacker U is rich and deep, but it may not reflect all of your areas of interests or expertise. If you're looking for more or more varied course material, here are some resources to help you find great, university-level online classes that you can take from the comfort of your desk, at any time of day.

  • Academic Earth curates an amazing list of video seminars and classes from some of the world's smartest minds, innovators, and leaders on a variety of topics including science, mathematics, politics, public policy, art, history, and more.
  • TED talks are well known for being thought provoking, interesting, intelligent, and in many cases, inspiring and informative. We've featured TED talks at Lifehacker before, and if you're looking for seminars on the web worth watching, TED is worth perusing.
  • edX is a collection of free courses from leading Universities like the University of California, Berkeley, MIT, and Harvard. There aren't many, but the ones offered are free, open to the public, and they rotate often.
  • Coursera has a broad selection of courses in-session or beginning shortly that you can take for academic credit (if you're enrolled) or just a certificate of completion that shows you've learned a new skill. Topics range from science and technology to social science and humanities, and they're all free.
  • Udacity offers a slimmer selection of courses, but the ones offered are not only often for-credit, but they're instructor led and geared towards specific goals, with skilled and talented instructors walking you through everything from building a startup to programming a robotic car.
  • The Saylor Foundation offers a wide array of courses and entire course programs on topics from economics to political science and professional development. Interested in a crash course in mechanical engineering? The Saylor Foundation can help you with that.
  • Education-Portal.com has a list of universities offering free and for-credit online classes to students and the public at large.
  • Open Culture's list of free online courses is broken down by subject matter and includes classes available on YouTube, iTunes U, and direct from the University or School's website.
  • The Open Courseware Consortium is a collection of colleges and universities that have all agreed to use a similar platform to offer seminars and full classes—complete with notes, memos, examinations, and other documentation free on the web. They also maintain a great list of member schools around the world, so you can visit universities anywhere in the world and take the online classes they make available.
  • The Khan Academy offers free YouTube-based video classes in math, science, technology, the humanities, and test preparation and study skills. If you're looking to augment your education or just take a couple video classes in your spare time, it's a great place to start and has a lot of interesting topics to offer.
  • The University of Reddit is a crowd-built set of classes and seminars by Reddit users who have expertise to share. Topics range from computer science and programming to paleontology, narrative poetry, and Latin. Individuals interested in teaching classes regularly post to the University of Reddit subthread to gauge interest in future couses and announce when new modules are available.
  • The Lifehacker Night School is our own set of tutorials and classes that help you out with deep and intricate subjects like becoming a better photographer, building your own computer, or getting to know your network, among others.

The beautiful thing about taking classes online is that you can pick and choose the classes you want to attend, skip lectures and come back to them later (only in some cases - some of these classes require your regular attendance and participation!), and do examinations and quizzes on your own time. You can load up with as many classes as you choose, or take a light course load and come back to some of the classes you meant to take at another time that's more convenient for you.

With Lifehacker U, you're free to take as many or as few of these classes as you like, and we'll update this course guide every term with a fresh list of online classes on new and interesting topics, some of which are only available during that academic term.

If you have online course resources or your university offers classes that are available for free online that you know would be a great fit for Lifehacker U, don't keep them to yourself! Send them in to us at tips+lifehackeru@lifehacker.com so we can include them in the next semester!

Title photo remixed from an original by Charles Amundson (Shutterstock).

Number of comments

Xbox Support Staff Say They Were Fired After Posting About Their Jobs On Kotaku

January 9th, 2013Top Story

Xbox Support Staff Say They Were Fired After Posting About Their Jobs On Kotaku

By Jason Schreier

Xbox Support Staff Say They Were Fired After Posting About Their Jobs On KotakuIf you do customer support for Microsoft, don't post about it on this website. You'll probably lose your job.

Over the past week, I've been in touch with two former Xbox support staff. Both people, who asked that we not use their names, say they were fired for writing comments about their jobs on Kotaku. One was let go last week, the other around a month ago.

In other words, be careful what you write on the Internet.

By now the stories are familiar: teens getting suspended for writing dumb things on Twitter; employees scolded for Facebook albums filled with bongs and whiskey. But how often does someone get let go for posting a comment on an Internet news article?

Last Friday, a person who we'll call Bob was told to call his manager at Alpine Access, the work-from-home company that employed him. (Alpine handles tech support for the Xbox 360.) His manager asked if he had ever heard of a website called Kotaku. Yes, Bob said—he had.

"[The manager] then continued on about how someone that was higher up at Microsoft found the comment I left on the news article," Bob said in an e-mail to me. "I was then reminded that we aren't allowed to speak about the company, or anything related to it on social media sites or any related sorts... I ended up apologizing for leaving the comment."

I reached out to Alpine Access for comment and was directed to a spokeswoman for Sykes, the company that owns Alpine.

"We do have confidentiality agreements with our clients," the spokeswoman said, noting that she couldn't comment on the specifics of this situation. "And so we do expect our employees to abide by those confidentiality agreements."

Bob's manager said he would be suspended from work until Monday as they investigated the issue. On Monday, Bob got another call. He was fired.

Here's the comment Bob made on Kotaku, in response to an article about Xbox support pranksters. (His comment has since been deleted.)

Xbox Support Staff Say They Were Fired After Posting About Their Jobs On Kotaku

"I believe this entire thing was taken a little too far," Bob told me. "I understand that it can make Microsoft look bad with an employee talking bad about their customers. But what I was saying wasn't as bad as they are making it seem."

The second former Xbox support staff, who we'll call Frank, has a similar, but completely separate story. Frank also worked for Alpine Access. A couple of months ago, he was asked to get on a conference call with three Alpine executives, who accused him of stealing from Microsoft by generating codes that give out free time on Xbox Live's premium Gold Membership.

But Frank says he didn't steal a thing.

"They told me they were going to find proof and press charges against me," Frank said in an e-mail to me. So he asked: if they found no proof, would he get his job back?

"Another person who was on the phone spoke up and said that's not the reason I was being fired," Frank said. "And that regardless of whether I'm innocent or not, they will never rehire me again because of the comments I made on Kotaku. They claimed the reason they're firing me is because I broke the non-disclosure agreement I signed when they hired me. This agreement stated that I'm not allowed to tell anyone I work for Microsoft or Xbox."

Here's the comment Frank was fired for:

Xbox Support Staff Say They Were Fired After Posting About Their Jobs On Kotaku

"In all honesty, if I was an employer and my employee wrote something like that about a product I was trying to sell, I could see myself firing them too," Frank said. "I'm upset about losing my job, but I understand where they're coming from."

While I've blacked out both Bob and Frank's usernames here (at their request), neither ex-Alpine employee used a Kotaku handle that was connected to their real names. We don't know how Microsoft connected their Kotaku comments with their identities. Yet another compelling reason to be very, very paranoid about what you do and say online.

Photo: pkchai/Shutterstock
Number of comments