Filters
Clear allSubject
- Careers (49) Apply Careers filter
- Climate Change (1) Apply Climate Change filter
- Computing (88) Apply Computing filter
- Cross curricular (11) Apply Cross curricular filter
- Design and technology (66) Apply Design and technology filter
- Engineering (32) Apply Engineering filter
- Food Preparation and Nutrition (9) Apply Food Preparation and Nutrition filter
- Leadership (1) Apply Leadership filter
- Mathematics (52) Apply Mathematics filter
- Personal development (3) Apply Personal development filter
- Psychology (2) Apply Psychology filter
- Science (626) Apply Science filter
- STEM Clubs (1) Apply STEM Clubs filter
Age range
Type
- Activity sheet (32) Apply Activity sheet filter
- (-) Remove Article filter Article
- Audio (2) Apply Audio filter
- Data set (1) Apply Data set filter
- Experiment (5) Apply Experiment filter
- Game (2) Apply Game filter
- Group work (3) Apply Group work filter
- Image (8) Apply Image filter
- Information sheet (23) Apply Information sheet filter
- Interactive resource (2) Apply Interactive resource filter
- Open-ended task (1) Apply Open-ended task filter
- Poster (7) Apply Poster filter
- Presentation (4) Apply Presentation filter
- Research (241) Apply Research filter
- Self assessment (1) Apply Self assessment filter
- Teacher guidance (40) Apply Teacher guidance filter
- Video (10) Apply Video filter
- Include Physical Resources (26278) Apply Include Physical Resources filter
Showing 733 results
This issue of Computer Science for Fun focuses on multimodal design. This involves interfacing with computers using more than one of your senses.
The articles include:
• Using air and ultrasound to create ‘shapes’ you can feel.
• Medical and veterinary training simulators with haptic feedback...
The magazine that presents the fun side of computer science. This issue includes:
• Artificial intelligence and mobile phone gaming
• Human error and human-computer interfaces
• Simple game algorithms
• The ‘first cyborg’
• The life of Alexander Graham Bell
• Viral...
This issue of Computer Science for Fun focuses on the work of scientists and engineers using computers to ...
This issue of Computer Science for Fun focuses on creative computing. Can a machine even ever be truly creative? After all they are just blindly following their programs. Surely that isn’t what creativity is about! But what do we really mean by creativity? We need to...
This issue of the magazine, presenting the fun side of computer science, includes articles on:
• The nature of artificial intelligence
• Computer generated images and motion capture in the movies
• The efficiency of insect brains
• JPEGs and the psychology of image compression
•...
This issue of Computer Science for Fun magazine contains interesting articles on:
• DNA data and error correction
• Neural networks
• Biometrics and security
• Computer science and medicine
• Finding a cure for cancer – links to computer science
• Dust-sized computers
...This special issue of Computer Science for Fun magazine is entitled ‘The Perception Deception’, and looks at computer science illusions
It includes articles covering:
• Experimental methods in computer science
• Head-up displays and Pepper’s Ghost
• Mobile technology and a ‘virtual...
This special issue of Computer Science for Fun is entitled ‘Computer Science Everywhere’, and looks at the ubiquity of computer technology. It features a range of well-written articles on:
• Mediascapes – location-sensitive multimedia
• Closed circuit video analysis – computing challenges
•...
A special issue of Computer Science for Fun focused on computers and images, containing articles on:
• Fractals
• Using Geomlab for tessellating images
• The golden ratio and beauty
• Robot artists
• The painter’s algorithm for drawing 3D graphics
• Communicating ideas...
This issue of Computer Science for Fun is entitled ‘Computer Science in Space’, and explores the role of computers in space exploration and astronomy.
It includes articles covering:
• Computer scientists working for NASA
• GPS and computer art projects that love your data
• Computers,...
This edition of Computer Science for Fun is entitled ‘The Earth Issue’, and features computer science applications that are environmentally friendly or that have helped scientists researching our planet.
The articles include:
• The power efficiency of the human brain vs modern computers
•...
From mathematical ringtones to distributed computing, this magazine from Queens University of London covers a variety of interesting and fun computer science topics in an easily accessible way. Also included are:
• Optical illusions and the way our brain works
• The history and future of email spam...
2015 is the 200th anniversary of Ada Lovelace’s birth. Famous as ‘the first programmer’ her vision of computer science was far wider. To celebrate, issue 20 of CS4FN magazine explores her life, her ideas and where modern research has taken some of those ideas. Women’s research is also still at the...
This Catalyst article looks at hearing loss, which is usually associated with the elderly, straining to hear the TV while turning up their hearing aid. As a teenager losing the ability to hear correctly seems decades away but hearing loss is increasingly becoming a problem for young adults and teenagers. The...
A Catalyst article investigating if mobile phones produce harmful radiation. The short article compares the view points of a concerned parent, protester, scientist, official report and a complacent citizen.
This article is from Catalyst: GCSE Science Review 2005, Volume 16, Issue 1.
...