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someone offered to move don't we oh you
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want the real on so yeah it's long the
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real answer well in I was working at a
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university. I was in helping a lot of
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stuff trying to use the internet for
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teaching and I had a very interesting
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job which they call the boundary ride
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was like a cowboy. So I basically a
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random office in the morning I spent
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the whole die just looking around the
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campus just with with different people
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helping them we problems. So one minute
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the cleaner one minute on it top vice
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chancellor teach. So I kind of got to
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know everybody at this time I had long
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hair yeah and a big be it and I was
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kind of like the internet person and by
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could see that everyone was having
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trouble trying to use even the basic
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stuff let alone things teaching. And I
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tried different tools that with and I
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eventually decided that I I need to
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make some so I sat down one day I had
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nothing yet zero. And I had to make a
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folder on my computer to put my working
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as like what am I gonna call this so I
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started thinking of the nine mood and I
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was trying different things first names
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so I had a in the topping the modular
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object oriented dynamic learning
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environments but these words all came
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from my full so what this thing was
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going to say yeah I thought it would be
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my hobby I thought I would work on the
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soft evenings spare time I thought I'd
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be academic eventually. And very
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quickly I stopped everything else just
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a little that's being this white now
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for fifteen years yeah and that's the
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short on stuff probably stop a are a
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lot of the I could talk for two hours
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Laughter and has been without to our
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first child and such teachers
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originally this good question because I
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I had this point of view of humans
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learning and the teachers and students
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in mood to just settings but then not
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be routine so you have the ability to
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give people permissions and part of
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what I used to recommend and to you my
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courses was give students teacher
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admissions to make things. But most
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people don't do this I stick with the
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default roles but yes it is a course
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management system and so it is about
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management of so I guess the the
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teachers I think now most of the work
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is happening about the students
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experience because ninety nine percent
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of the users of are students in fact so
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much more important to focus on this
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now okay thanks multiple no move the
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can also And the speed the seasonal
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funded in this object or move the than
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I would explain this already it at a so
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the the module I mean when I can I had
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the these words. And I also wanted it
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to be something you could say I want to
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that see a would that meant something
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but was also an acronym acronym signing
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french and also the domain name had to
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be so yeah I once I got some little in
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the middle. It's an English word. It's
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not used very much it's very most
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people we speak English don't know it's
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an English word. It's a very skew a
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word used in like nineteen ninety or
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something like this a long time ago but
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it's it means the process of doing
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something in a unstructured. So you you
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it's across of two words muse use like
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the use and do you know you draw on a
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piece of paper using and do do. So the
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idea is that you would you would look
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around the the do different things and
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you would learn almost non
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intentionally you would just pick it up
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by doing which is exactly what we all
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do on these things now as we get into
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click that it and you know I really
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think the following right you kind of
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just follow your inclination and you
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end up the back then in the beginning
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of the last decade this was not so
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common these are not hard questions we
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then there's something more palace the
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platform you treat it "'cause" I tell a
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factual dish executives on the team
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would help to connect platform okay
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well some of this is my like my
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reasonings one it's free open source
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right people can just get it and use it
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in the beginning I spent a lot of time
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putting willow into places on the
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internet where people could find that
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it's now this is school search engine
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optimisation ACR but they were the last
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decade many places where people had
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scripts. PHP scripts little programs
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doing different things. And always make
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sure moves listed in all these things.
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And sometimes it was surprising people
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are looking for a little things that
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they would find that's a whole learning
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management system sitting here and
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downloaded. So the afraid but secondly
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I think one of the things that made it
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popular was it was one of the first
00:07:04
systems that made of course as a list
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of things to do. It's such a simple
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simple idea it's so simple. And yet
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noise systems do that mostly. So if you
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look at black borrow web CT they have
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content discussions. Um another thing
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separated by time whereas in little
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everything is combined in two weeks or
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topics I thought this was the most
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basic white atlantic close and so I
00:07:41
might than this way and I expected that
00:07:43
the community would come up with new
00:07:46
interesting close formats because
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that's a plug in the course format this
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this display is a plugin actually there
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are very few course format plugins that
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change this basic least idea and so I
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think a lot of people when they saw at
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the time felt very into people wait
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yeah okay that's good good honest we
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call this process scaffolding
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scaffolding your expectations. It's
00:08:16
just like when you build a building in
00:08:18
put a scuffle. It's a structure yeah
00:08:23
probably it's probably more reasons
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well actually the third and biggest
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reason is the move from the beginning I
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always feel teen and always thought
00:08:36
about sustainability. It's so important
00:08:40
you know open source projects stalking
00:08:42
someone will yeah it seems to be the
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very last thing people think about they
00:08:47
get a grind or some money or some time
00:08:50
to build software but then I don't plan
00:08:52
how it's going to leave and five and so
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they in two thousand and four what I
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came up with the middle partner program
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the middle partners are essential to
00:09:04
the sustainability yeah it's angel just
00:09:08
having a community using it does not
00:09:11
necessarily make a project you need
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people who up I need to work on some
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and the pardon is the middle part was
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to the the experts in the middle
00:09:24
community other ones who are paint for
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the development the cool sustainability
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of the project. So this super
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important. And I think when I started
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that no other open source projects had
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such a bit had "'em" business model
00:09:41
some Mike it sustainable and I think
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that's why a lot of them have
00:09:44
disappeared where is mood was still
00:09:46
here so did you think when you start
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soon without that it would create such
00:09:54
a huge community ah I see I've been
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using open source software since I
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would say nineteen eighty five so I was
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very involved in open source software
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from a long time and I knew the power
00:10:14
all that the power to change type
00:10:16
software changes in and share. It's
00:10:20
very close to acted in academia you
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know when you write when you are
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researching you invent something you
00:10:27
publish a paper to tell everybody and
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everyone she is this information that's
00:10:31
the sci model it so you know and so
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natural and good it feels good to
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sharing communicate so it's always been
00:10:39
the best mode for me. Um now academics
00:10:43
is not so and your research papers get
00:10:47
locked up by publishes you have to buy
00:10:50
them it costs a lot of money it's not
00:10:52
good but I knew that if mood was open
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source that a lot of people would like
00:10:59
it and use it but I wasn't quite
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prepared for how many so I was
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surprised I thought it would be much
00:11:05
small this day I put up on the internet
00:11:09
someone in Canada downloaded and
00:11:11
installed it and started using it for a
00:11:13
school that was like well slide names
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Jacob remain. And he was seventy six is
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all yes like unexpected I used it in a
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goal school like a secondary school I
00:11:30
was like wow are this universities. So
00:11:34
I was just surprised immediately and
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then you can still see the early
00:11:38
discussion the first discussions about
00:11:40
who are still on top. So you can go
00:11:44
back and see them still and back then I
00:11:49
had so much input from people. I was
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putting out new releases every couple
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days. So every few days I put out any
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version of middle. Um people would say
00:12:02
that's a bug. And then go to sleep. And
00:12:05
then they wake up in the morning. And
00:12:07
you know that they here in Europe or in
00:12:09
america. And meanwhile during the night
00:12:12
the striking was working fixing and I'd
00:12:15
wake up in the morning and there's a
00:12:17
new version of Nero and it has new
00:12:18
feature it's always got all the new
00:12:20
stuff and so it became very exciting
00:12:22
this cycle. So got pretty so yes it's
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very cool I'm I'm very very lucky as
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personally I can go anywhere in the
00:12:33
world and find some friends now it's
00:12:38
these are nice questions and then I
00:12:45
have a trick one a good okay. So enough
00:12:50
ideas that I'm students and using
00:12:52
movable almost everyday and no seems to
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years I'm also developing something so
00:12:57
have both sides of the your and as a
00:13:01
student I always surprised to see that
00:13:05
teacher using that as a PDF symmetry.
00:13:08
And just imagine that's you have every
00:13:12
student that using will like provoke
00:13:14
just hear what we use a two down sorry
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because yeah this is this is so true
00:13:26
that move do is used very badly ninety
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percent of the time and it's the the
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generation of people who are teaching
00:13:36
with middle in the last ten years never
00:13:39
took an online course it off and it's a
00:13:45
big it's been a big problem in my PHD
00:13:50
originally I thought if I built the
00:13:52
tools people would understand the menus
00:13:55
though but they don't people have their
00:13:59
own conceptions of learning and
00:14:01
teaching from when I did that's cool
00:14:05
man university and so they do things
00:14:07
the same way. And most of that
00:14:10
generation the first thing they wanna
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do is put PD f.'s. And put contents and
00:14:15
the lecture notes okay yeah I put in
00:14:19
there. And maybe weeklies maybe maybe
00:14:22
in assignments and and that's all but
00:14:27
as you can see from the talks he many
00:14:29
experts to do you know had a start
00:14:31
using little there some tools they
00:14:34
removed with get real depth I mean the
00:14:37
wise you can use forums a still unlike
00:14:39
any other forums on other tools anyway
00:14:43
I think workshops the databases
00:14:49
"'cause" stories and and all these
00:14:50
tools have pedagogical things in on
00:14:55
that nobody ever uses which is very
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sad. So we get back to our card focus
00:15:01
which is on usability. So it's about
00:15:03
people knowing how to use these tools
00:15:06
and learning how to use yeah that's a
00:15:09
big work I think well having a second
00:15:14
round that a lot of the remote remote
00:15:19
controls and more difficult for the
00:15:22
mood for sort of controls most of most
00:15:25
of our spectrum we're gonna filters
00:15:27
from what in also accessible promoting
00:15:30
exactly promote low you click on the
00:15:32
maximum fifty percent of it well I it's
00:15:46
been international from the stuff
00:15:48
because of the internet. So what I I
00:15:51
said that I put it on the internet one
00:15:53
day like the act canadian was using it
00:15:57
and then if you look back at the
00:16:00
versions I think I added the
00:16:02
translations in version one point zero
00:16:06
three or something very very early and
00:16:10
straight away I had people volunteering
00:16:13
to translate into multiple languages.
00:16:16
So I the language supporters been
00:16:18
anyway since the beginning. And now we
00:16:20
have I think it's a hundred and twenty
00:16:23
languages or more but what I found
00:16:28
interesting was the culprit cultural
00:16:31
differences internationally. So in a
00:16:35
stride yeah it's not possible to get
00:16:38
more than one hundred percent probably
00:16:41
the same here yeah but in America you
00:16:45
can get a hundred and ten plus and and
00:16:48
I was like well it's a meticulous and I
00:16:53
ice five forward for mathematical
00:16:55
reasoning for some time before I
00:16:59
realised like I shouldn't fight this
00:17:01
it's a cultural thing with the united
00:17:03
states of America that I can have more
00:17:05
than a hundred percent and all okay and
00:17:07
we rewrite the great bulk to allow this
00:17:11
right so you know even even I thought
00:17:14
it was stupid at a lot of developers
00:17:16
think quite a lot of things that people
00:17:18
want a stupid it's what I do is what
00:17:21
they need is we have to implement these
00:17:23
things. So it does complicate the the
00:17:27
little bit to be international. But I
00:17:31
was talking to someone he I think it's
00:17:33
really quite you know the country like
00:17:36
Switzerland you have more than one
00:17:40
official language here you have more
00:17:43
than one official culture. And it I
00:17:46
think it makes life complex as a
00:17:48
country but also you have an
00:17:50
understanding of multiculturalism and
00:17:53
everyone at least can work on fixing
00:17:55
these problems and and working out how
00:17:59
to deal with it whereas someplace is a
00:18:02
very Mona cultural and I don't even
00:18:04
realise that other people can think
00:18:07
differently or better the high
00:18:08
differently do things differently so
00:18:10
yeah I'm very happy that movie is a a
00:18:15
multicultural place. Yeah why did it
00:18:23
shows and that process that essence
00:18:26
very beginning yeah open source was my
00:18:30
fault mode. So it's essential I think
00:18:36
it's what makes a little there's always
00:18:41
saying in like a know it like a a
00:18:42
research platform you know everybody
00:18:46
can study how to do online learning and
00:18:49
shape a practise without having to
00:18:50
worry about licenses costs things like
00:18:54
that oh "'cause" "'cause" of the the
00:18:59
plastic could shock for fuckers like
00:19:01
that the second one you can see some
00:19:04
that you did look was the move the
00:19:05
what's that S it's us right I would
00:19:17
expect this no I would seriously is
00:19:21
like I am not even though you know
00:19:23
you're asking very nice questions and
00:19:25
it I had under no illusion that it's a
00:19:28
perfect piece of software I use
00:19:29
everything to right it's middle very
00:19:37
complex it has many liars. So it's a at
00:19:40
all to media lines of source code in
00:19:43
the bottom and these too many many jobs
00:19:45
and they integrate with many many
00:19:47
systems but the person who installs
00:19:50
into has to choose which pieces to use
00:19:54
and to configure it probably and then
00:19:56
you have the teachers who take this
00:19:58
configuration of blue and they have to
00:20:00
implement a course and they have to use
00:20:04
some things and not use other things.
00:20:06
Um in a descriptions that have to be
00:20:08
clear by that each it needs to be a way
00:20:11
of user interface and most teachers I
00:20:16
have no chance to know it is they're
00:20:18
not software designers. So you know
00:20:22
looking just so far that H is the
00:20:24
responsible but even the students are
00:20:25
responsible about students are
00:20:27
responsible for giving feedback you
00:20:29
know way to teach is to help improve
00:20:31
teaches. Um and so there's a lot of
00:20:34
responsibilities a lot of this the
00:20:37
results ease up or experience a bad
00:20:40
experience because things are difficult
00:20:44
to get a file from one place to another
00:20:46
or it's difficult to to format
00:20:49
something in a particular way all is
00:20:52
you know all the problems of technology
00:20:56
coming together. Um and yeah on top of
00:21:02
that you also have the internet itself
00:21:04
which you know why five sometimes
00:21:07
doesn't work so this sometimes that
00:21:09
work and usually when someone is trying
00:21:12
to use moo and anything goes wrong I
00:21:14
always blame a little was it was down
00:21:16
downright. It's not not always middle.
00:21:20
Um anyway I think I might focus on
00:21:23
usability will help because it's about
00:21:26
simplifying interface for everybody and
00:21:28
it gives everyone more ability to
00:21:31
produce quality of a result makes
00:21:35
sense. So it's a job we all have to
00:21:39
work on and you could see from
00:21:41
presentations that everyone is trying
00:21:44
to solve these problems and work do you
00:21:49
still have new ideas about developing
00:21:52
without or is it only of the or indeed
00:21:55
the department work some ah well the
00:22:02
roadmap of middle some of it comes from
00:22:05
the community. Um some of that I never
00:22:09
I've never even another because I mean
00:22:11
I come to these conferences and I see
00:22:14
really cool things that I never heard
00:22:16
about before you know that people are
00:22:18
doing in the community which is really
00:22:20
practical but I have many ideas sure my
00:22:27
list of ideas is like a thousand
00:22:29
things. And I'm always trying to push
00:22:32
them into the process and encouraged by
00:22:36
developers to work on on some things
00:22:39
and not other things yeah I have a lot
00:22:41
of ideas there's a there's many many
00:22:43
things not done yet. So is your idea as
00:22:49
plugin or to the the but basically no I
00:22:53
focus more on the basic too because the
00:22:58
plugins the community develops and yeah
00:23:04
there there are many that some of them
00:23:05
plugins straight yeah but I guess is my
00:23:09
job to focus on the core formidable
00:23:10
particularly yeah if you could start
00:23:18
your project motel all over again would
00:23:21
you do something differently or
00:23:23
completely differently depends on which
00:23:27
level it would still be open source the
00:23:31
why that community work some things
00:23:33
would be pretty similar. Um but on the
00:23:36
technical level it would become if you
00:23:38
started with today's technology it
00:23:40
would be a very very different type of
00:23:42
system yeah you know I'm the the middle
00:23:46
using now was not my first attempt it
00:23:48
was much the prototype. So I had a
00:23:50
couple of prototypes that I started.
00:23:53
And rejected the reason this once tie
00:23:56
was because I used PHP and PHP at the
00:23:59
time was the only language that you
00:24:04
could use on very very cheap web
00:24:07
hosting the the very first really web
00:24:10
hosting starts become very cheap like
00:24:12
five dollars a month. And you could run
00:24:15
a PHP program there. And so this was a
00:24:18
good the very good thing for murder
00:24:20
would like P like people run Mouton
00:24:22
service easily. Um but it's not the
00:24:27
nicest language. And now the techniques
00:24:33
of really of balls people have their a
00:24:35
new frameworks many new frameworks menu
00:24:38
languages the front ends the Java
00:24:41
scripts and the HTML in the CSS of the
00:24:44
front end of appearance of of of the
00:24:47
web now is very involved since then you
00:24:52
know what I started Miro all that you
00:24:53
know are talked to manually as capital
00:24:56
letters. But it's really stuff but yeah
00:25:01
things the very much nice and now from
00:25:05
a computer science point. So yeah it
00:25:07
would be the lot but nobody can see the
00:25:14
card right usually it's it's out there
00:25:17
on the show you develop do you have any
00:25:19
computer science will know a bit yeah
00:25:22
yeah I mean I'm ill you know with the
00:25:26
apple you just it's a nap it's like any
00:25:28
other system you'd it's just gonna be
00:25:30
it's more about the communication
00:25:32
people not thinking about the the
00:25:34
programming anymore okay you say that
00:25:42
make sure sure are using modelling very
00:25:45
different way maybe fronts
00:25:47
functionality features so it's been a
00:25:50
three days that you're here and what's
00:25:53
your vision of our vision of wood or if
00:25:57
you have to summarise here what you're
00:25:59
selling three D three days what you
00:26:02
what would you keep and what would you
00:26:04
throw away as in that school but ID a
00:26:08
dark keep it all that's like saying
00:26:11
beautiful soup which ingredients which
00:26:14
you throw away doesn't they're all go
00:26:16
together so there's been some very
00:26:19
technical presentations. It's this
00:26:21
being teaches being all sides site. I
00:26:28
like as I said before I love this
00:26:31
culture you have here there's a little
00:26:34
bit more all the research focus maybe
00:26:37
it's the higher it higher education
00:26:39
university people that are here but I
00:26:41
love the fact that you try and justify
00:26:44
things with tighter. And this is a good
00:26:49
culture at this very moment it's being
00:26:52
recorded is a going live at this very
00:26:56
moment there is a a middle moot in the
00:26:57
US in Montana which is not like that
00:27:01
but I you can just look at the tweeter
00:27:06
and you'll see the difference. Um this
00:27:11
is more my style. So yeah I I really
00:27:14
like this I guess yeah it's perfect
00:27:19
there's nothing else I would want more
00:27:21
you know I love the fact that everyone
00:27:23
is trying to push push move forward in
00:27:26
some way. Um I guess my job is to
00:27:30
trying to like this and getting to cool
00:27:33
so everybody can can benefit sidecar to
00:27:37
work without a signal OHQ to try and
00:27:40
get this stuff you know out there yeah
00:27:46
no and I with double key if you use
00:27:55
your ideas mixtures chairs projects I
00:27:59
know you're doing the mobile version of
00:28:04
creating. This idea flatmates some
00:28:10
notes. Um which I remember the I I I
00:28:18
think some of the offline uses and and
00:28:23
it allows got here this sort of offline
00:28:26
mood those little mini movie does this
00:28:28
is a very exciting area the the talk
00:28:34
from the the gentleman from the Congo
00:28:38
yeah because the right yeah yeah
00:28:41
thinking about the african context I
00:28:43
think this sort of offline how we
00:28:45
operate in a place where there's no
00:28:47
internet is very interesting and got me
00:28:50
thinking about how to how to improve
00:28:53
middle for this situation. Um because
00:28:57
we'll take internet for granted you
00:28:59
know in in this sort of society here
00:29:01
and the most the world does not have
00:29:03
that the every time I see a middle page
00:29:10
that's full of little text I just I'm
00:29:14
always thinking how can we stop that
00:29:17
because when you have a wall of text it
00:29:23
it's not a good user interface like you
00:29:25
look at these apps. They're not much
00:29:27
text okay it's quick small chunks. Um
00:29:33
easy to absorb and developing those
00:29:37
sorts of things. It's yeah right now is
00:29:41
all the responsibility of the teaches.
00:29:45
But I think moo could do more to have
00:29:49
content easily available to grab
00:29:53
examples to grab. Um bits of metal
00:29:56
content to build up your courses
00:29:59
quicker. And it's not just about what
00:30:01
the teacher does it should be making
00:30:04
students create content in that way as
00:30:07
well suspect making it more easily easy
00:30:10
consumption. I guess something thinking
00:30:14
about these things also the virtual
00:30:15
reality stuff I have been thinking
00:30:18
about virtual reality for like twenty
00:30:21
years. Um and it's always been coming
00:30:24
coming it's coming it's coming. It's
00:30:27
yeah right on Monday when I get home my
00:30:33
I have a a a virtual reality hits a
00:30:35
waiting for me. Um and I should be
00:30:38
playing with a lot. And I'm eight I got
00:30:45
some good ideas was thinking this week
00:30:47
about how you would show you middle
00:30:50
individuality world literally as a web
00:30:53
page that that kind of thing. But then
00:30:57
the mortgage simulations. And you pass
00:31:01
user information to those somebody who
00:31:04
could pass parameters into those apps
00:31:08
you do something. And maybe you get a
00:31:10
great for you get assessment the
00:31:13
assessment gets pushed back into middle
00:31:15
again I was just thinking has that
00:31:17
gonna work and what's it's like a LTIVR
00:31:21
I'm gonna coin it now feel TI so yeah
00:31:25
that's been interesting to so yeah some
00:31:29
things. I guess at that a beings also
00:31:33
struggling a lot with the french. So I
00:31:36
I I'm missing a lot of details of the
00:31:39
presentations which is frustrating and
00:31:41
just encourages me to learn french more
00:31:43
is that have it easy to his own cop who
00:31:51
the platform comic will piece of pot as
00:31:55
you did the more which is a promise
00:31:56
you'll on top of a school posse would
00:32:00
new Orleans all is this a CI a like
00:32:05
decision the bush pretty much a key
00:32:08
piece director more steel. She's on
00:32:11
often it just to see like a multi
00:32:13
sources there so about yeah you could
00:32:15
do this come up as a suspect I think
00:32:18
I'm just to GW is the social but for
00:32:20
and what exactly what planned so what
00:32:25
yeah the question is how can we do the
00:32:40
do for this you students not to use
00:32:43
good who's ah oh well I well no it's
00:32:50
it's not meant to replace those things.
00:32:53
I mean I use about six apps for just
00:32:59
chat we probably older new rules right
00:33:06
now we're working on the middle
00:33:08
messaging and notifications to improve
00:33:10
that's even more and actually I said to
00:33:13
my company last week I said when I get
00:33:16
home next week the whole company is
00:33:19
just gonna use them into rap for all
00:33:22
communications because I think it'll
00:33:25
improve the at very quickly. Um so you
00:33:30
yeah I think middle just be another
00:33:34
tap. So you may be used telegram with
00:33:37
your frames and use Google plus for
00:33:40
this group and you use Scott for work
00:33:44
cool or something but you you use
00:33:46
different things for different groups
00:33:48
and that will probably always be like
00:33:50
that. But hopefully you might use
00:33:53
material for your school stuff. And
00:33:56
it'll work as well as the other ones I
00:34:00
think we're close actually it with this
00:34:02
it'll be should be cool well here is
00:34:04
that have you noticed how the old
00:34:08
converging they all look the same now I
00:34:10
spoke Messinger and the apple I miss
00:34:13
each ad telegram and Scott pinnacle
00:34:16
pretty much exactly the same you can
00:34:18
have individual chats all group chats
00:34:20
you can send gifts and pictures a my
00:34:24
cons they're all the side. So I'm the
00:34:27
the the middle one is getting close and
00:34:30
so it will be the same it'll look just
00:34:32
like so that's a go I've got a question
00:34:44
for you guys what's the one thing you
00:34:50
would change about all the most you
00:34:56
you're from this institution here yeah
00:34:57
so it's the same will so I I have seen
00:34:59
it or how what still coming down to who
00:35:02
set up I don't know is that what
00:35:08
direction would you like it to be what
00:35:10
you think it should be for your little
00:35:11
sisters and brothers who haven't not
00:35:13
yet using it I think it would be cool
00:35:19
if you could configure it as you want
00:35:21
like a colour so you can structure it
00:35:23
the way you want because some times
00:35:24
like the teacher to it one way it's not
00:35:26
much coffee it's all very cool good
00:35:31
suggestion for me as a student user I
00:35:38
think it's a very easy to use and we
00:35:40
don't actually for for example I think
00:35:45
the teachers has I have a more to the
00:35:48
problems other than those two and the
00:35:51
the real question you think it for for
00:35:53
them because yeah oh yes. I I recall
00:36:00
for me. I it's very useful for
00:36:03
everybody but I think for us. It's
00:36:06
pretty easy to use but they put a we
00:36:09
have of course so for example of
00:36:11
communication we have the the documents
00:36:13
on the on the and of course and I think
00:36:18
the on the board the with difficult is
00:36:21
it to find the the key the key like you
00:36:26
to to enter and in the course ah then
00:36:29
you you you do have to come to lectures
00:36:31
sometimes I so for me as a simple user
00:36:39
I think so okay. So well anyone else
00:36:43
got any suggest it's the for me what I
00:36:48
was looking for in middle east maybe
00:36:50
something more that's a lie something
00:36:52
more for me like every website if we
00:36:55
apses doing something for say students
00:36:57
I think at one time we want to use more
00:37:00
than ones you smooth for me and my
00:37:02
friends in classroom I own for really
00:37:06
need to have everything else on we were
00:37:09
discussing yesterday about something
00:37:11
like press I'm education just for
00:37:14
having reminder to say oh I have to put
00:37:17
yeah silent tomorrow don't forget it
00:37:20
and and waited for see what some
00:37:22
obviously I'm improvement we make for
00:37:24
that size experience for students that
00:37:30
that point is one I keep hearing is
00:37:33
simply from students what is next what
00:37:38
do I have to do now which I think is a
00:37:41
problem a big problem we have to work
00:37:43
on that we have started actually that
00:37:47
it's something I think we we need to
00:37:48
solve so yeah okay anyone oops audience
00:38:01
mister what is your vision of wood
00:38:13
early twenty S you wanna see it well
00:38:21
it'll be like I said we pretty
00:38:25
invisible it'll be well but it's very
00:38:30
hard to predict twenty years cheese oh
00:38:34
okay I ten years yeah look it's gonna
00:38:38
shrink to you won't even notice it's
00:38:41
gonna be almost whole accessible
00:38:46
through whatever device but they won't
00:38:47
be screens very much they'll be glasses
00:38:51
you put on they'll be things you put in
00:38:54
your ear doubly things you have
00:38:55
embedded in your brain and you'll be
00:38:58
communicating three messaging too this
00:39:02
system which will be almost like an IRI
00:39:04
or something yeah it'll be you'll be
00:39:07
talking to it's talking with its I
00:39:10
think and that's very interesting I so
00:39:18
I don't I didn't think it was gonna be
00:39:21
of a possible to download information
00:39:23
your head but I read some research
00:39:25
recently that suggests that might be
00:39:28
possible. Um like on the matrix the
00:39:31
movie where she needs to learn have a
00:39:34
fly this helicopter. And he downloads
00:39:37
the the pilots the pilot information
00:39:40
straight ahead. It's just goes okay
00:39:43
that's gonna mention twice a
00:39:44
helicopter. Um I thought this
00:39:46
ridiculous. Um but I I read something
00:39:49
in it. I don't nineteen twenties I mean
00:39:54
how many times now when you wanna ask
00:39:55
request a trick question you talk to
00:39:58
your phone now right you do a Google
00:40:01
search or something within seconds you
00:40:03
know that answer that Amy is this time
00:40:07
can be almost nothing you will know it
00:40:09
that stuff they will be you know. So I
00:40:14
don't know maybe we'll be doing
00:40:15
something else we want be teaching
00:40:17
anymore I maybe it won't even have
00:40:20
universities I don't know if it'll be
00:40:23
ten use could be very interesting time
00:40:25
well we'll just have more slim fines
00:40:35
and it's gonna be more or less the same
00:40:36
maybe that but it would make us feel
00:40:38
better what do you think it's gonna be
00:40:45
ten years' anybody else think got some
00:40:47
ideas you think will have universities
00:40:50
in ten years all scattered like blocks
00:41:07
yeah yeah you know I'm working in
00:41:14
morals from for for adults so this
00:41:18
being when you it's a continuous
00:41:20
training and and and I think is
00:41:23
becoming more and more important. And
00:41:26
now you will not have menu for me
00:41:28
anymore we do we need a CT on one side
00:41:31
squadrons of the side. And poor fraud
00:41:34
ut another way probably will wow how
00:41:40
would we would like to see to see them
00:41:42
walking more together and also private
00:41:44
companies as well. yeah okay but my
00:41:47
dear yeah yeah anyone else wanna
00:41:51
predict. So I I don't know what to more
00:41:58
there will be but I think I mean while
00:42:01
you're here oh sorry I things of value
00:42:03
is no more about the content the value
00:42:06
is about the way you coach people or
00:42:10
you many when you're on the side my as
00:42:16
the way you want decide or so students
00:42:19
is your weight is way you are mentoring
00:42:20
insane yeah and I think this is the
00:42:24
next university of information to face
00:42:28
and and you can see with some cinnamon
00:42:33
so more of a personal a personalised
00:42:36
support continuous support like I don't
00:42:39
want to students when they say we need
00:42:41
to do some nice experiments. And to be
00:42:46
able to move blocks introduce things
00:42:48
and to get information what's next to
00:42:51
get the information zero I I feel the
00:43:04
the major changes going to be what
00:43:07
happened in the media in other words
00:43:09
some would be content providers some
00:43:14
will be audience. Now call the
00:43:17
students. And the there will be
00:43:19
operators like we do groups. And as
00:43:24
more and more tasks being a traumatised
00:43:27
industrialised. Um we will see waves of
00:43:32
changes and the the winners will be the
00:43:36
organisations universities or training
00:43:39
centres that do understand the learning
00:43:41
experience and the learning curve that
00:43:44
is expected by the end users. Um so
00:43:49
that they can address the needs either
00:43:51
to be to have a tutor ought to be self
00:43:55
pacing they're burning. But basically
00:43:58
the three main issues or industrial
00:44:02
eyes the content production serve the
00:44:05
user needs. And and illustrate the the
00:44:09
whole thing which is basically what
00:44:10
cool provide. So once to think about
00:44:13
it. it's yeah so we just you know how
00:44:19
do you guys feel about the world
00:44:22
changing so rapidly. "'cause" nobody
00:44:24
hears if experience such change like
00:44:27
but you think the when you'll teach is
00:44:34
when you are teaching when you are
00:44:35
running things. How do you feel about
00:44:38
that the double feature excited or you
00:44:43
came to change the world a use case I
00:44:47
think I'm scared okay because they
00:44:53
ninety percent of the our courses or
00:44:57
with the computer. And I heard the that
00:45:03
it would be better if a student stay at
00:45:06
home. And then violates the side. And I
00:45:11
just thought if I have questioned and
00:45:14
they listen to "'em" and explaining his
00:45:20
team in the in the video. I don't know
00:45:25
how I can have a great answer yeah I
00:45:29
think we should avoid this feature yeah
00:45:31
we we can make the future as we want we
00:45:33
don't want the matrix I hope where we
00:45:36
are all lying in the billboards with
00:45:38
wise in virtual reality all the time.
00:45:41
Um I I like getting together with
00:45:45
people and I think most people do so we
00:45:47
need to make this happen yeah good
00:45:54
that's all solved yeah yeah oh if we
00:46:02
can really be skewed because form is
00:46:04
different I mean this like computer
00:46:06
scientists business I changing is
00:46:10
having you work new experiments and
00:46:12
improving but something that's web and
00:46:16
always you have new won't won't be able
00:46:18
to change is having someone that no
00:46:22
knowledge that is around you I can just
00:46:24
you using sites if you know every tear
00:46:28
it apart everything every line of code
00:46:30
of to do that and you have the people
00:46:33
just right of from right in your site
00:46:36
and say okay you can do that that's the
00:46:38
record but if you change is that it
00:46:40
works better I it's cheaper and it's
00:46:43
faster and maybe some say that
00:46:46
something you will use if you just see
00:46:49
like you said before with my creeks and
00:46:51
you have everything way if you want to
00:46:53
have stick to the chance to have
00:46:55
someone that's as already experiments
00:46:58
and you that's so it set if we were all
00:47:02
wearing virtual reality helmets right
00:47:04
now. And actually I mean astride idea
00:47:06
right now. But I can come to
00:47:08
Switzerland very easily you know would
00:47:09
be pretty cool. "'cause" it's a lot I
00:47:12
got along travel back this weekend. But
00:47:16
but yeah no it is something about being
00:47:18
in the same place is still very very
00:47:21
high fidelity this Fisher reality isn't
00:47:23
it very good resolution well we went
00:47:33
that escalated quickly yeah it's
00:47:39
everyone ready to go home do you think
00:47:44
I almost for that we have something
00:47:51
from you from every student here just
00:47:53
for you to be like us excellent. I am I
00:47:58
if I may just I wanted to to say a very
00:48:08
big thank you to all of the sponsors of
00:48:12
the conference and for all of you for
00:48:14
coming of course but what's a specially
00:48:17
thank you for the institution here to
00:48:21
to find never know how to say this
00:48:23
movie so at ha hash she S so well sorry
00:48:30
it just to me English just like he's so
00:48:33
something he's he's so no but I I
00:48:38
really I think this is being a very
00:48:40
beautiful very well organised I think
00:48:42
everyone would agree it's run exactly
00:48:45
like the cliche of a swiss clock and
00:48:50
has been a a real pleasure and one of
00:48:52
the best movies ever I would say so
00:48:56
thank you very much for inviting us all
00:48:58
here and and especially the students
00:49:08
and for helping and and taking part in
00:49:10
Spain really really helpful five and

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Conference Program

Ergonomie : Je THÊME Martin!
Courtin Brice, Université de Tours
July 6, 2016 · 3:33 p.m.
1580 views
Utilisation de Moodle dans le cadre d'une formation hybride Culture et Compétences numériques
Catherine Loire, Université de Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne
July 6, 2016 · 4:30 p.m.
156 views
La communauté Moodle francophone
Nicolas , Martignoni
July 7, 2016 · 9:05 a.m.
276 views
10 Years Mahara : Looking back to look forward
Kristina Hoeppner, Cheffe de projet MAHARA et conseillère communautaire chez Catalyst IT
July 7, 2016 · 9:36 a.m.
Communauté Mahara francophone
Dominique-Alain Jan, Coordinateur de la communauté MAHARA francophone
July 7, 2016 · 10:10 a.m.
271 views
Moodle : un outil au service de la modernisation des systèmes éducatifs en Afrique francophone
Bernard Dumont, Pascal Tschimanga, Honoré Nzambu
July 7, 2016 · 2:06 p.m.
160 views
SPOC : former à Moodle avec Moodle
Frederike Hanke, Patrick Lemaire, Université de Rouen
July 7, 2016 · 4:07 p.m.
297 views
Le MOOC Moodle Mobile
Jean Marc Doucet
July 7, 2016 · 4:50 p.m.
Faire cours en BBBermuda
Laura Bertetto, Université Sorbonne Nouvelle - Paris 3, Julien Cros - Université Aix Marseille
July 7, 2016 · 5:16 p.m.
271 views
Conclusion de la journée du 07.07.2016
Patrick Lemaire
July 7, 2016 · 5:53 p.m.
Moodle et l'approche nordique
Valentin Berclaz
July 8, 2016 · 9 a.m.
163 views
Moodle, outil indispensable à la classe inversée
Sonia Perotte, HES-SO GE
July 8, 2016 · 10:58 a.m.
222 views
Moodle colonne vertébrale d'un cours multi-blended
Laurent Barbin, ESSCA
July 8, 2016 · 11:35 a.m.
224 views
Moodle en Raspberry PI
Nicolas Martignoni, Fri-Tic Fribourg
July 8, 2016 · 12:08 p.m.
664 views
Du papier à l’écran: mise en place d’un dispositif d’examen sur ordinateur avec Moodle
Omar Benkacem, Université de Genève
July 8, 2016 · 1:34 p.m.
179 views
La Zapette Moodle V3
Thierry Koscielniak, Université de Paris
July 8, 2016 · 2:35 p.m.
339 views
Discussion avec Martin Dougiamas
Martin Dougiamas, Fondateur et développeur en chef de MOODLE
July 8, 2016 · 3:46 p.m.

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