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KDE e.V./Sprints/KdeEdu-2010

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KDE-Edu Meeting at Randa (Switzerland) 20th to 25th May 2010

Meeting Scope

Conclusions

Cooperation with Vox Humanitatis

Bèrto 'd Sèra and Sabine Emmy Eller from Vox Humanitais were invited at the meeting to extend our collaboration. An export of Ambaradan data into kvtml2 format was successfully created by Vox Humanitatis. This means that Parley and also other applications can retrieve the data from Ambaradan directly without "intermediate conversion". As test data we used Agrovoc by FAO. Parley was able to digest the huge file with 100.000 entries and still remained fast. The complete dataset for Agrovoc for now will consist of 56 language combinations. For the future this means that data can be acquired fast, directly from Ambaradan which also means that our contents creating team can concentrate on the terminology entries only without needing to think about manual data conversion. Further ways of co-operation with other KDE projects were discussed and we will come back to these points step by step (use of KLettres which teaches alphabet and has already several languages sounds for example).

Guidelines for Educational Software

  • It should be easy to create content for our programs: we should enforce this point.
  • Use or support existing free formats: the new KEduca for example should be compatible with Moodle and other test formats.
  • Make more generic programs instead of focusing in a narrow age target => regroup several programs within one framework in the future

Better promotion of KDE-Edu

  • A logo was started (the concept is a simple plant with 2 leaves growing from the U of Edu: your knowledge grows with KDE-Edu)
  • More blogs about our work
  • Better use of social networks

KDE-Edu is used in huge numbers in Brazil for example and is an important assest for promoting KDE SC as a whole!

Pictures

Press

  • Dot Story:

Blogs

Meetings Notes

Sponsors

While the KDE e.V. sponsored travel and accomodations, some local sponsors also kindly donated time, hardware, money and help in various forms.

We would like to thank the following:

Graphics (button) by David Vignoni