Apple announces iTunes U on the iTunes Store
Apple on Wednesday announced the launch of iTunes U, a dedicated area within the iTunes Store featuring free content such as course lectures, language lessons, lab demonstrations, sports highlights and campus tours provided by top US colleges and universities including Stanford University, UC Berkeley, Duke University and MIT.
"iTunes U makes it easy for anyone to access amazing educational material from many of the country?s most respected colleges and universities," said Eddy Cue, Apple?s vice president of iTunes. "Education is a lifelong pursuit and we?re pleased to give everyone the ability to download lectures, speeches and other academic content for free."
Created in collaboration with colleges and universities, iTunes U makes it easier to extend learning, explore interests, learn more about a school and stay connected with an alma mater. Content from iTunes can be loaded onto an iPod with just one click and experienced on-the-go, anytime, making learning from a lecture just as simple as enjoying music.
"From its earliest days, Stanford has sought to serve the public by sharing the knowledge generated by our faculty and students," said Stanford Provost John Etchemendy. "Our partnership with Apple and iTunes U provides a creative and innovative way to engage millions of people with our teaching, learning and research and share the experience of intellectual exploration and discovery that defines our university."
Apple's iTunes Store features the world?s largest catalog, adding the new education content to over five million songs, 350 television shows and over 500 movies. The iTunes Store has sold over 2.5 billion songs, 50 million TV shows and over two million movies, making it the world?s most popular online music, TV and movie store.
"iTunes U makes it easy for anyone to access amazing educational material from many of the country?s most respected colleges and universities," said Eddy Cue, Apple?s vice president of iTunes. "Education is a lifelong pursuit and we?re pleased to give everyone the ability to download lectures, speeches and other academic content for free."
Created in collaboration with colleges and universities, iTunes U makes it easier to extend learning, explore interests, learn more about a school and stay connected with an alma mater. Content from iTunes can be loaded onto an iPod with just one click and experienced on-the-go, anytime, making learning from a lecture just as simple as enjoying music.
"From its earliest days, Stanford has sought to serve the public by sharing the knowledge generated by our faculty and students," said Stanford Provost John Etchemendy. "Our partnership with Apple and iTunes U provides a creative and innovative way to engage millions of people with our teaching, learning and research and share the experience of intellectual exploration and discovery that defines our university."
Apple's iTunes Store features the world?s largest catalog, adding the new education content to over five million songs, 350 television shows and over 500 movies. The iTunes Store has sold over 2.5 billion songs, 50 million TV shows and over two million movies, making it the world?s most popular online music, TV and movie store.
Comments
The website: http://www.apple.com/education/itunesu/ is re-designed, and there is a dedicated iTunes page now. Initially, you can only go to specific iTunes U from outsider specific links. Anyway, it seems iTunes U are going to grow...
still not on my main page for the itunes store. also not on the main page is the itunes plus information. seems an odd omission.
It's not on my main page either - you seem to have to go via search.
Try searching on 'Doctorow', and you'll see an iTunes U link at the top of the search results (alongside Music, video, podcast etc). Or use advanced search where you can search by title, description or institution
still not on my main page for the itunes store. also not on the main page is the itunes plus information. seems an odd omission.
And you can reach the iTunes Plus info via Your Account. Can't find any actual tracks though
Digg it
Dugg.
This isn't new.
What I would hope is new, however, is that starting with iTunes 7.2, free stuff doesn't have DRM -- which seems pretty stupid when it's free.
I remember when I first downloaded free copies of political debates and speeches from iTunes being surprised that those things had DRM just like paid-for music, but I suppose that was only because iTunes simply didn't have any ability to turn DRM off -- whatever was sent from the iTunes servers to the iTunes client app, the client app automatically wrapped that content in DRM tied to the iTunes account you were signed into, no matter what.
I was just about to make my standard snarky comment about it not being available in the UK store, but it does seem to be
It's a little bizarre isn't it. I'm not sure why we'd want US university courses in the UK. I get enough free offers of diplomas in my mail already anyway.
And I'd doubt many people outside the US know what K-12 is either. Is it an upgraded Doctor Who robot assistant?
Usually Apple segregate non-local content pretty well.
Alas, no.
anyone know if these universities offer a private site on iTunes for just their students and how that works?
They offer a site, I don't believe its private. Google for iTunes U and you'll find a few sites like Stanford's. I'm not sure if these are identical to the sites we see on iTunes now.
I'm in the UK, and I find this quite useful. I'm studying Computer Science at university, and access to these resources could be quite useful to me and other students. It'd be nice if we could search by course title, not just by university...