I am not even out of week "zero" and there are problems aplenty.
The introductory videos have background music that threatens to swamp the speech. They have used student "actors" to make a point instead of just using a sheet with half a dozen bullet points, thus making a 30 second item last 10 minutes and obfuscating the simple points.
To copy the simple circuit in Lab 0, I have to scroll my screen up and down all the time.
The simulator instructions state that voltage sources will show current flowing out of the (+) pin. Which it sort of does. The arrow indicates current flowing into the pin, but with a negative value. Great way to confuse newbies.
It requires knowledge of Kirchhoff's Voltage Law (KVL) more than a week before it is dealt with in lectures - or should I say a week before it was dealt with in the 2007 videos.
It tells us to use the sign of the first terminal of the first component we come to, to provide the basis of voltage differences. The resistors we have just added have no sign. This would be added arbitrarily in a hand sketch, the polarity being insignificant so long as it is consistent. I am using a negative voltage for a drop and a positive for the supply, but if they chain resistor polarity in the same order as they have denoted the source, my signs will be wrong.
Measuring voltages on the SPICE transient plot, the measured (offset sinusoidal) voltage never reaches 2V, or 0V at 90 and 270 degrees. This is obviously due to analysis step sizes, but as a total greenhorn student I would think something was wrong.
They really are over-doing "hey engineering is fun and exciting" thing. And saying the same things 3 times.
The question and answer area shows a massive 5 questions per screen. I thought MIT were leaders in researching usability?
Not to mention saying the same things 3 times.
Oh and saying the same things 3 times.