Media Summary: Can there be a universal intermediate programming language? Sounds like Esperanto to us - Professor Brailsford has more. The Mixed Reality lab at the University of Nottingham has been studying virtual and augmented reality for decades. We chatted to ... Opening up the impenetrable Mac - Just what is inside this

Not Discussing The Web 30 Years Old Computerphile - Detailed Analysis & Overview

Can there be a universal intermediate programming language? Sounds like Esperanto to us - Professor Brailsford has more. The Mixed Reality lab at the University of Nottingham has been studying virtual and augmented reality for decades. We chatted to ... Opening up the impenetrable Mac - Just what is inside this UTF8 is fantastic, but people still have translation issues with some characters - Tom explains why. More from Tom Scott: ... Keeping data anonymous seems easy, but keeping identities separate is a big problem. Professor Derek McAuley explains. A hacked car that could kill you should be more worrying than a thousand lightbulbs taking Facebook offline. University of ...

With nefarious big tech companies wanting all your data, could BWK, Professor Brian Kernighan visited Nottingham, so Professor Brailsford couldn't resist an 'on-camera' chat about Unix, Bell ... ISPs don't always get it right - they gamble that all of their subscribers won't use all of their bandwidth all of the time. Dr Richard ... Multiple ways to break through restrictions in a network* demonstrated by Dr Richard G Clegg of Queen Mary University London.

Photo Gallery

(Not) Discussing the Web @ 30 Years Old - Computerphile
The UNCOL Problem - Computerphile
The Attack That Could Disrupt The Whole Internet - Computerphile
The "Goodbye" Problem - Computerphile
Web vs Internet (Deep Dark Web Pt1) - Computerphile
Origins of the Web - Computerphile
Metaverse is 30yrs old - Why Facebook is late to the party - Computerphile
The Problem with Time & Timezones - Computerphile
Coding a Web Server in 25 Lines - Computerphile
Opening up the 30yr old Mac - Computerphile
Routers, The Internet & YouTube Offline - Computerphile
Brian Kernighan Q&A 3/3 - Computerphile
View Detailed Profile
(Not) Discussing the Web @ 30 Years Old - Computerphile

(Not) Discussing the Web @ 30 Years Old - Computerphile

When the World Wide

The UNCOL Problem - Computerphile

The UNCOL Problem - Computerphile

Can there be a universal intermediate programming language? Sounds like Esperanto to us - Professor Brailsford has more.

The Attack That Could Disrupt The Whole Internet - Computerphile

The Attack That Could Disrupt The Whole Internet - Computerphile

Audible free book: http://www.audible.com/

The "Goodbye" Problem - Computerphile

The "Goodbye" Problem - Computerphile

You say "bye" first! -

Web vs Internet (Deep Dark Web Pt1) - Computerphile

Web vs Internet (Deep Dark Web Pt1) - Computerphile

To explain the deep

Origins of the Web - Computerphile

Origins of the Web - Computerphile

The

Metaverse is 30yrs old - Why Facebook is late to the party - Computerphile

Metaverse is 30yrs old - Why Facebook is late to the party - Computerphile

The Mixed Reality lab at the University of Nottingham has been studying virtual and augmented reality for decades. We chatted to ...

The Problem with Time & Timezones - Computerphile

The Problem with Time & Timezones - Computerphile

A

Coding a Web Server in 25 Lines - Computerphile

Coding a Web Server in 25 Lines - Computerphile

Just how simple can a

Opening up the 30yr old Mac - Computerphile

Opening up the 30yr old Mac - Computerphile

Opening up the impenetrable Mac - Just what is inside this

Routers, The Internet & YouTube Offline - Computerphile

Routers, The Internet & YouTube Offline - Computerphile

Routers carry the traffic of the

Brian Kernighan Q&A 3/3 - Computerphile

Brian Kernighan Q&A 3/3 - Computerphile

https://www.facebook.com/

EXTRA BITS - UTF-8 'nearly' works - Computerphile

EXTRA BITS - UTF-8 'nearly' works - Computerphile

UTF8 is fantastic, but people still have translation issues with some characters - Tom explains why. More from Tom Scott: ...

The Anonymisation Problem - Computerphile

The Anonymisation Problem - Computerphile

Keeping data anonymous seems easy, but keeping identities separate is a big problem. Professor Derek McAuley explains.

Internet of Things Problems - Computerphile

Internet of Things Problems - Computerphile

A hacked car that could kill you should be more worrying than a thousand lightbulbs taking Facebook offline. University of ...

Web 3.0 & Privacy - Computerphile

Web 3.0 & Privacy - Computerphile

With nefarious big tech companies wanting all your data, could

HTML: Poison or Panacea? (HTML Part2) - Computerphile

HTML: Poison or Panacea? (HTML Part2) - Computerphile

SGML 'theologians' were at war with

UNIX Special: Profs Kernighan & Brailsford - Computerphile

UNIX Special: Profs Kernighan & Brailsford - Computerphile

BWK, Professor Brian Kernighan visited Nottingham, so Professor Brailsford couldn't resist an 'on-camera' chat about Unix, Bell ...

Why Internet Slows Down When it's Busy - Computerphile

Why Internet Slows Down When it's Busy - Computerphile

ISPs don't always get it right - they gamble that all of their subscribers won't use all of their bandwidth all of the time. Dr Richard ...

Hacking Out of a Network - Computerphile

Hacking Out of a Network - Computerphile

Multiple ways to break through restrictions in a network* demonstrated by Dr Richard G Clegg of Queen Mary University London.