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  2. Department of Engineering - Contacting people from web pages

    www3.eng.cam.ac.uk/contact_addresses.html
    Contacting people from web pages. The default maintainer of any individual page should be shown at the bottom of the page, though the actual maintainer of the information may be mentioned earlier. You can contact them following the guidelines below.
  3. Journeys of Discovery: Jocelyn Bell Burnell and Pulsars

    Duration: 00:06:16
    Published Date: 2020/11/28
    Sitting in a field strung with 120 miles of radio telescope antennae, 24-year old Cambridge PhD student Jocelyn Bell couldn’t shake the feeling that she’d seen something before. The year was 1967. For two years, Jocelyn had helped solder and sledgehammer the antennae into place at the Mullard Radio Astronomy Observatory just outside Cambridge. As she pored over her rolls of chart recordings,
  4. Supporting Kettle's Yard

    Duration: 00:04:05
    Published Date: 2015/05/28
    Every year Kettle's Yard must raise over 50% of its income from external sources. This short film showcases the importance of philanthropic support to Kettle's Yard. http://www.kettlesyard.co.uk/support-us/
  5. Settling in at Cambridge University

    Duration: 00:01:51
    Published Date: 2019/04/08
    For more information on settling in at Cambridge University see: https://www.studentwellbeing.admin.cam.ac.uk/ Disclaimer: While every effort has been made to ensure that the information contained in this video is accurate at the time it was uploaded, changes are likely to occur. It is therefore very important that you check the University and College websites for any updates before you apply for
  6. Body of work: the silent teacher helping students learn anatomy

    Duration: 00:02:38
    Published Date: 2016/12/07
    For over 450 years, students have been studying anatomy at Cambridge through whole body dissection. But students find that they learn far more than just the architecture of the human body. https://medium.com/@cambridge_uni/2985c0cb84ab#.3e0t18swb
  7. Are we working too much? The UK’s four-day week trial

    Duration: 00:05:43
    Published Date: 2023/05/12
    A team of Cambridge social scientists have been conducting research on the world’s largest trial of a four-day working week. Last year, 61 organisations in the UK committed to a 20% reduction in working hours for all staff for six months. With no fall in wages. The findings suggest that a four-day week significantly reduces stress and illness in the workforce, and helps with worker retention.
  8. #CambVet : Snow grit and animal paws

    Duration: 00:00:24
    Published Date: 2023/03/07
    Walking you dog in the snow? Cambridge University vet Charlotte has some advice if you are about to go out or if they have just come back in.
  9. Successful honey-hunters know how to communicate with wild birds

    Duration: 00:01:24
    Published Date: 2023/12/07
    A new Cambridge University study has found that wild honeyguide birds prefer to cooperate with people who have learned local cultural traditions, to find and access honey-filled bees’ nests.
  10. What is education for?

    Duration: 00:37:30
    Published Date: 2024/02/28
    Best-selling author Tara Westover (https://www.gatescambridge.org/about/news/what-does-it-mean-to-be-educated/) , researcher Aliya Khalid (https://www.gatescambridge.org/about/news/how-mothers-affect-their-daughters-education/) and Thabo Msibi (https://www.gatescambridge.org/about/news/thabo-msibi-south-africa/) Deputy Vice Chancellor for Teaching and Learning at the University of KwaZulu-Natal
  11. 3D-printed robot hand ‘plays’ the piano

    Duration: 00:01:01
    Published Date: 2018/12/19
    Scientists have developed a 3D-printed robotic hand which can play simple musical phrases on the piano by just moving its wrist. And while the robot is no virtuoso, it demonstrates just how challenging it is to replicate all the abilities of a human hand, and how much complex movement can still be achieved through design.
  12. Bee swarm at Cambridge University

    Duration: 00:01:10
    Published Date: 2018/05/24
    A bee swarm outside the Old Schools and Trinity Hall at Cambridge University filmed on the afternoon of 24 May. Dr Ristuccia explained that the bees visit once a year.
  13. Cambridge Festival of Ideas 2011

    Duration: 00:02:41
    Published Date: 2011/12/01
    A record breaking 12,000 members of the public attended the 2011 Festival of Ideas. Nearly 190 events took place over twelve days and there was a chance to get involved in everything from a circus skills workshop to debates on current affairs issues. Check out everything you missed in this short video! The Festival of Ideas celebrates the arts, humanities and social sciences with hundreds of free
  14. What is the future?

    Duration: 00:53:56
    Published Date: 2021/03/26
    Hello and welcome back to Mind Over Chatter! This second series is all about the future - and in this first episode we’re going to be considering what the future even is… Have you ever wondered how time works? It turns out, the answer is a lot more complicated than we thought. Please fill out our survey https://forms.gle/r9CfHpJVUEWrxoyx9 to tell us what your mind thinks about our chatter.
  15. Managing workload at Cambridge University

    Duration: 00:02:01
    Published Date: 2022/10/26
    What does time on and time off look like for you? Kit from Student Minds Cambridge and Zaynab from Cambridge Students' Union share their tips on managing workload and staying well at Cambridge #ReachOutCambridge #MentalHealth #CambridgeStudents #CambridgeUniversity #StudentLife #TakeABreak #Wellbeing
  16. Pride at Cambridge: Elisabeth and Jason

    Duration: 00:06:24
    Published Date: 2021/06/30
    What's it like to be LGBTQ+ at Cambridge? Queer identifying Sociology PhD candidate and LGBTQ+ researcher Elisabeth Sandler spoke with alumnus Dr Jason Mellad about coming out at Cambridge, and why we should all be working towards a world where anyone can be as out and as proud as they want to be. Jason did his PhD in Medicine at Clare College and is now CEO and co-founder of Start Codon, based
  17. COVID-19 coronavirus vaccine: everything you need to know

    Duration: 00:06:18
    Published Date: 2020/03/24
    The Cambridge scientists developing a COVID-19 coronavirus vaccine Professor Jonathan Heeney explains why we need a vaccine against the new COVID-19 coronavirus and how his team is using new technology developed for influenza and Ebola viruses to target the new infection. Thumbnail Credit - Fusion Animation
  18. The Monarchy with David Starkey

    Duration: 00:52:08
    Published Date: 2009/09/29
    With Dr. David Starkey. More than the biographies of the kings and queens of England, this lecture is an in depth examination of what the English monarchy has meant, in terms of the expression of the individual, the Mother of Parliaments, Magna Carta, the laws of England and the land of England. The importance of the rich heritage of the Anglo Saxon kings is featured but it does not stop there.
  19. Uncovering our Origins: Monkeys, Apes and 'Primitive Man' -…

    Duration: 00:13:24
    Published Date: 2009/09/29
    The Descent of Man would forever change the way we thought about ourselves and where we come from but how accurate was Darwin in his ideas about human evolution? Professor Robert Foley, Director of the Leverhulme Centre for Human Evolutionary Studies explores how 19th-century society viewed ideas of 'early man', and reveals how far our knowledge has progressed since Darwin sketched his
  20. Student advice on dealing with exam stress

    Duration: 00:06:24
    Published Date: 2018/05/18
    Cambridge University students Courtney, Dylan, Lina, Timi, Sujina and Reiss give some helpful advice on how they relieve stress during exam season. Directed by ibzmo
  21. What are the gowns for at Cambridge University?

    Duration: 00:00:55
    Published Date: 2023/10/10
    New Cambridge students: how are you getting on with your formal gowns? Some new @SidneySussexCollege students told us a bit about theirs during matriculation day #Cambridge #Freshers2023 #CambridgeUni #CambridgeUniversity #Uni
  22. Opinion: The Ukraine invasion one year on – with Dr Rory Finnin

    Duration: 00:02:15
    Published Date: 2023/02/24
    On 24 February 2022, the Russian Federation launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. One year on, Dr Rory Finnin, associate professor of Ukrainian Studies, reflects on the war and asks: what have we learned? Recorded 20 February 2023, nine years after the start of the Russo-Ukrainian War.
  23. The Longitude Problem

    Duration: 00:09:31
    Published Date: 2010/05/10
    The discovery of a way to measure longitude revolutionised long-distance sea travel forever, but the institution which made it happen has all but disappeared from memory. Now researchers led by Professor Simon Schaffer are launching a new project to remember the Board of Longitude and tell its remarkable story in full for the first time.
  24. Meet Professor Debbie Prentice: the new Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge "It gives me great pleasure to introduce myself as the University of Cambridge’s new Vice-Chancellor. I am excited to be taking on this new role at a critical moment for all of us. I am a psychologist with an interest in social norms. I have spent most of my academic career at Princeton, including the last
  25. Darwin's mother and the miniature: with Randal Keynes

    Duration: 00:14:33
    Published Date: 2011/02/17
    Charles Darwin's mother Susannah Wedgwood died when he was just eight, and he could never remember her face - until he discovered a long-hidden portrait of her as a young woman. Hear Darwin's great-great-grandson Randal Keynes explain why finally seeing this miniature of his mother (on display at the Fitzwilliam Museum) was so significant for the great naturalist, and why portraits of loved ones
  26. Cambridge Vloggers at ACS Access Conference 2018

    Duration: 00:03:32
    Published Date: 2018/09/07
    Nissy Tee, Ibz Mo and Courtney Daniella offer advice and encouragement to all the students who attended the African-Caribbean Society's 2018 Access Conference.
  27. Cambridge University life for Care Leavers and Estranged students

    Duration: 00:05:24
    Published Date: 2019/10/25
    Dozens of Cambridge University undergraduates come from care backgrounds and/or are estranged from their families, like Lily-Rose and Connall. Both met through the Realise Project, which aims to encourage more young people from similar backgrounds to go to University. They say the following schemes were incredibly useful in allowing them to focus on their studies: Realise Project-
  28. Sea ice can control Antarctic ice sheet stability

    Duration: 00:01:24
    Published Date: 2022/05/13
    Despite the rapid melting of ice in many parts of Antarctica during the second half of the 20th century, researchers have found that the floating ice shelves which skirt the eastern Antarctic Peninsula have undergone sustained advance over the past 20 years.
  29. Cambridge interviews ahead of football Varsity 2024

    Duration: 00:08:02
    Published Date: 2024/03/01
    More information on the matches here: https://cuafc.org/varsity-24 ⚽ The women and men of CUAFC have six Varsity games coming up this month, starting at the home of @OxfordCity this Sunday and then at @CambridgeUnitedFootballClub on the 15th March 2024. ️ @damifadun asks club-mates; Anna, Abbie, Tom and Ife about how they are preparing for their big games and about what it's like to be part
  30. A View From Water Level

    Duration: 00:31:24
    Published Date: 2009/10/01
    Currently Co-Director of the Alaska Mountain Safety Center, Inc. Jill Fredston is one of North America's leading avalanche specialists, as well as being an accomplished rower and explorer. Her book Rowing to Latitude Journey along the Arctic's Edge won the 2002 National Outdoor Book Award for Literature. Her most recent book Snowstruck In the Grip of Avalanches was published in November 2005. Her
  31. What's in David Cameron's baskets? The UK's deal with the …

    Duration: 00:30:18
    Published Date: 2016/03/07
    After long negotiations, on 19 February Prime Minister David Cameron announced that the European Council had agreed a new settlement for the United Kingdom in the European Union. In line with the Conservative Party manifesto, this agreement has triggered a referendum on whether Britain should remain in the European Union to be held on Thursday 23 June. In this video, Catherine Barnard examines
  32. The Search for Endurance

    Duration: 00:07:24
    Published Date: 2019/01/24
    In early January, a team of Cambridge scientists set out on an expedition to study and map the Larsen C ice shelf in western Antarctica, and – ice conditions permitting – search for the wreckage of Sir Ernest Shackleton’s Endurance. Professor Julian Dowdeswell, Director of the Scott Polar Research Institute, is chief scientist on the ambitious expedition, which will use drones, satellites
  33. Go Viral! Fighting the ‘infodemic’

    Duration: 00:01:03
    Published Date: 2020/10/12
    Go Viral! is a new game developed in partnership between the UK Government and the University of Cambridge to help fight the ‘infodemic’: the deluge of false information about COVID-19. Based on ‘inoculation theory’, the game simulates an environment for users to play the role of a fake news producer, so they can understand how misinformation is circulated online. Play Go Viral! here:
  34. The Future by a Futurist

    Duration: 00:06:00
    Published Date: 2021/06/10
    Richard Watson, #futurist-in-Residence at the Entrepreneurship Centre, Cambridge Judge Business School, talks about the future of energy, health and AI – and the most dangerous idea in the world. Read more: www.cam.ac.uk/this-cambridge-life/the-futurist-who-would-like-the-future-to-slow-down Listen to Richard discuss the future of AI – its potential benefits and harms – in our recent Mind
  35. 23 seconds of museums in Cambridge

    Duration: 00:00:24
    Published Date: 2023/11/03
    Ready for a Cambridge adventure? ️ We have eight museums for you to explore and to help you get started, here's the first four: Museum of Zoology ❄️ The Polar Museum Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology Whipple Museum of the History of Science Can you find them all? #Museums #CambridgeMuseums #CambridgeUniversity #Cambridge #UniversityOfCambridge
  36. Podcast: What are we (as a global community) doing right now?

    Duration: 00:49:16
    Published Date: 2020/12/10
    Last episode, we talked about how we got to where we are now with climate change, but do we even know what’s going on with climate change right now? In this episode we’ll talk about what tipping points we’re approaching, how and why we’re still struggling to gain momentum toward action on climate change, and what difference it would make if carbon dioxide was a brown smelly substance. To
  37. Pain in the machine

    Duration: 00:12:06
    Published Date: 2016/10/31
    Pain in The Machine is a short documentary that considers whether robots should feel pain. Once you've watched our film, please take a moment to complete our short survey https://www.surveymonkey.co.uk/r/PainintheMachineSurvey Pain is a feeling that most would describe as being unpleasant, both physically and emotionally. Why then do humans and other animals have pain, and how is it useful?
  38. Biodiversity and thinking outside the box: Literature and Place

    Duration: 00:04:11
    Published Date: 2016/04/14
    How is the environment represented in children’s books? Can we talk to children about climate change through literature? These sorts of questions interest Dr Jenny Bavidge, Senior Lecturer in the University of Cambridge’s Faculty of English and Institute of Continuing Education, who explains here about how her work on literature connects with research in biodiversity conservation. This film
  39. T-cell assassins captured on film hunting down cancer cells and…

    Duration: 00:00:30
    Published Date: 2021/10/15
    Cambridge researchers have captured on film the activity of T cells – an important component of our immune system – as they hunt down and kill cancer cells. For the first time, they have also shown how these cells reload their toxic weapons. Cytotoxic T cells are specialist white blood cells that are trained by our immune system to recognise and eliminate threats – including tumour cells
  40. The role the Biology research base has to play in policy

    Duration: 00:04:24
    Published Date: 2013/05/15
    Douglas Kell, Chief Executive of the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) looks back to C.P.Snow's famous "Two Cultures" lecture of 1959 and discusses the role the Biology research base to policy making today.
  41. Crania Americana -the most important book in the history of…

    Duration: 00:08:24
    Published Date: 2014/03/19
    On display at the Whipple Library, Cambridge, is a book described as the 'most important book in the history of scientific racism' Current research into this book is revealing how racist ideas travelled between the United States and Europe in the 19th century. Crania Americana, published in Philadelphia in 1839 by Samuel George Morton, is being studied by Cambridge University PhD student James
  42. Perceptions (CFI film)

    Duration: 00:01:37
    Published Date: 2015/10/05
    Cambridge Festival of Ideas explores new and original thinking on some of the most pressing issues of the day. The aim of the Festival is to fuel people’s interest in arts, humanities and social sciences through a series of events ranging from talks, debates and film screenings to exhibitions and comedy nights. Of the over 250 events at the Festival, most are free. www.festivalofideas.cam.ac.uk/
  43. When is a system complex?

    Duration: 00:03:24
    Published Date: 2018/03/12
    Flocking birds, weather patterns, commercial organisations, swarming robots... Increasingly, many of the systems that we want to engineer or understand are said to be ‘complex’. But what does this mean? How do these so-called 'complex systems' differ from the more easily understood systems that we are familiar with? Visit: http://complexityprimer.eng.cam.ac.uk for more on complexity and
  44. Critical stage of embryonic development now observable v1

    Duration: 00:00:12
    Published Date: 2012/02/10
    New research, from the laboratory of Professor Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz of the University of Cambridge, enables scientists to view critical aspects of mammalian embryonic development which was previously unobservable. Around the fourth day, at which point the developing embryo implants into the mother's womb, its development becomes hidden from view as this is taking place. Yet this is a very
  45. Podcast: What would a more just future look like?

    Duration: 00:49:44
    Published Date: 2021/04/16
    Our society is more unequal than ever, as the top 1% control over 44% of the world’s wealth while 689 million people are living on less than $1.90 per day. In this episode, we asked our guests what the future of fairness, justice, and equality should look like, and how their research can help to bring about a fairer society. Alexa Hagerty and Natalie Jones shared how injustice can be thought of
  46. Bursaries at Cambridge University

    Duration: 00:00:54
    Published Date: 2021/06/23
    Find out more details here: https://bit.ly/3gOa2Tm The Cambridge Bursary Scheme has been extended for students starting their course in 2021. Non-repayable bursaries of up to £3,500 will be available to students with Home Fees status starting in 2021 onwards with residual* household incomes of up to £62,215. All new undergraduates in 2021 will be eligible for the new bursary scheme, regardless
  47. Anti-fraud lasers

    Duration: 00:01:41
    Published Date: 2013/11/05
    An anti-fraud laser detector could be used to identify counterfeit banknotes, pharmaceuticals and luxury goods. The prototype was developed with support from the Cambridge Innovation and Knowledge Centre
  48. Cambridge's new Vice-Chancellor

    Duration: 00:01:12
    Published Date: 2010/09/30
    On 1 October 2010, in a ceremony in Cambridge's Senate House, Sir Leszek Borysiewicz was admitted to office as the 345th Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge. He was previously Chief Executive of the Medical Research Council, and before that Deputy Rector of Imperial College London. The University of Cambridge is one of the world's greatest research Universities, with 17,500 students
  49. Day In The Life – Powerlifting

    Duration: 00:02:32
    Published Date: 2024/01/09
    Do you like to lift? ️‍♀️ MPhil student Larabella Myers is part of the Cambridge University Powerlifting Club. She's trying to qualify as one of the Club's representatives to face Oxford in the Varsity competition later this term! #Powerlifting #DeadLift #GymLife #UniSport #Varsity #CambridgeUniversity #Cambridge #UniversityOfCambridge
  50. J is for Jay

    Duration: 00:04:24
    Published Date: 2015/08/06
    The Cambridge Animal Alphabet series celebrates Cambridge's connections with animals through literature, art, science and society. Here, J is for Jay – a surprisingly clever corvid with the ability to mimic human voices and much more. Jays are corvids – members of the crow family. The jays we see in Britain are Eurasian jays. With their pinkish plumage, and characteristic flash of blue, they

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