Intelligent Television

Video for culture & education

  • The South Video
  • Within the Law Video 1
  • On Copyright 2010 Clip 1
  • Orphan 2
  • John Dower
  • The Memory Project
  • Orphan 1
  • Open Video Conference
  • Harlem Video Archive
  • National Academy of Science Energy Project
  • Bruce Zuckerman
  • The Coldest Winter

Intelligent Television produces innovative films, television, and online video; conducts research in the future of media; and provides strategic planning and consulting services, all in close association with leading cultural and educational institutions and renowned directors and cinematographers — and all to make educational and cultural material more widely accessible worldwide.

From the Intelligent Channel

Strategic consulting

Audio-Visual Conservation at The Library of Congress

logo for Audio Visual Conservation at Library of Congress

Located at the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains in Culpeper, Virginia, the Library's newly completed Packard Campus of the National Audio-Visual Conservation Center provides underground storage for this entire collection on 90 miles of shelving, together with extensive modern facilities for the acquisition, cataloging and preservation of all audio-visual formats. The Library has contracted Intelligent Television to provide strategic planning guidance organizing events for the 2010 public opening of this facility.

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From Open Culture

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Play Caesar: Travel Ancient Rome with Stanford’s Interactive Map

Scholars of ancient history and IT experts at Stanford University have collaborated to create a novel way to study Ancient Rome. ORBIS, a geospatial network model, allows visitors to experience the strategy behind travel in antiquity. (Find a handy tutorial for using the system on the Web and YouTube). The ORBIS map includes about 750 [...]

Play Caesar: Travel Ancient Rome with Stanford’s Interactive Map is a post from: Open Culture. You can follow Open Culture on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and by Email.

Einstein Explains His Famous Formula, E=mc², in Original Audio (Plus More Cultural Curiosities)

Last week we played for you the only known recording of Sigmund Freud’s voice (1938). Now it’s time to revive the voice of another intellectual giant, Albert Einstein. In this recording, the physicist offers the briefest explanation of the world’s most famous equation, E=mc2. When was this recorded? We’re unfortunately not sure. Let’s [...]

Einstein Explains His Famous Formula, E=mc², in Original Audio (Plus More Cultural Curiosities) is a post from: Open Culture. You can follow Open Culture on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and by Email.

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Tools to explore

MediaThread logoMediaThread is a next-generation platform for deep exploration, close analysis, and customized organization of web-based multimedia content. Designed at Columbia University’s Center for New Media Teaching and Learning, MediaThread is built on open-source software and enables users to view video closely, clip segments, attach annotations and tags, and organize them with other media for scholarly analysis.

Archives for today

San Francisco Bay Area Television Archive

James Baldwin talking with students

The San Francisco Bay Area Television Archive, established in 1982, preserves more than 4,000 hours of newsfilm, documentaries, and other programs produced in northern California between 1939 and 2005.  Among the treasures recently put online are 1960s films of James Baldwin and Maya Angelou and Marlon Brando speaking at the funeral of Black Panther Bobby Hutton. The Archive is part of San Francisco State University Library’s Department of Special Collections.

Open Video Studio

Bruce Zuckerman

Intelligent Television has established a new Open Video Studio to cost-effectively produce more video resources for the open education and open content movement.  The objectives of the Studio—based in New York but networking educational production facilities across the United States and abroad—are threefold:

*  to evaluate the use of video in teaching and learning;
*  to catalyze video production for education; and
*  to build new tools—editing, annotation, search—for more cost-efficient video production and distribution.

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