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The Silicon Graphics Teaching Laboratory at the University of Cambridge has been replaced by the Chemical Information Laboratory, and this web page of information on how computers can be useful in teaching chemistry is for historical interest only. The site is no longer active, but the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine offers a capture of the website as it appeared on 10/06/2007. This does not include access to the moving images.
Three series of podcasts: ‘Science Talk’ is a weekly audio report by Steve Mirsky discussing the latest developments in science and technology through interviews with leading scientists and journalists. The service began in February 2006 and is available by podcast or online download. ‘60-Second Science’ is a daily, one-minute report or commentary on a topic of scientific interest. ‘60-Second Psych’ is a weekly, one-minute commentary on the latest studies in neuroscience and behaviour, which is issued each Thursday.
The IET is one of the world’s largest engineering institutions with over 168,000 members in 150 countries. The site offers free teaching resources and classroom activities for students aged 11-19 years including lesson plans, handouts and film clips. To gain access to the downloadable-free content you need to register, and to access all the resources which include video clips you need to filter by ‘video’. The content can also be searched by subject, exam board, key stage and age range. Subjects include Biology, Chemistry, Computing, Maths, Physics and D&T.
A lengthy collection of multimedia chemistry resources on the Web, divided up into Analytical Chemistry, Biochemistry, Nucleic acid-related, Protein-related, General chemistry, Inorganic/organometallic chemistry, Organic chemistry, Physical/theoretical chemistry, Safety, Software, and Other WWW chemistry resources. However, a frustratingly large number of the links do not work.
Part of the Internet Archive, which also covers archived moving images (The Internet Moving Images Archive), audio and software, the Wayback Machine holds cached versions of thousands of websites and billions of pages, allowing users to look at sites that are no longer available or at earlier versions of ones that are still around. An invaluable resource that, due to the gigantic nature of the holdings, is slightly hampered by the fact that no list of the holdings can be easily provided. This means inevitably that correct recall of the URL in question is necessary, or failing that, searching for it on the web first.
You are currently searching in Moving Image Gateway. Search all the BUFVC's collections for 'Chemistry' in All fields.