SleetAndSnow wrote: » A fellow BISer?
ACitizenErased wrote: » I'm doing BIS All our labs have been virtualised.
titan18 wrote: » Ha, fair enough. You a later year I'd hope? I think 3rd/4th year most will be able to work away. A 1st year, and even some 2nd years will be lost though as most will have never touched programming languages before. Assuming you're connecting into a terminal via an app/website and doing it via that rather than your own laptops needing to be powerful to run the IDEs.
ACitizenErased wrote: » All the lab equipment has been virtualised on Azure, which we started sorta using last year so basically all tutorials are being done by connecting to the lab itself, sorta like being there in person
titan18 wrote: » Can ye still play games that way? It's not a lab if half the class aren't playing some form of game Back to the topic, I can understand students needing to move up if they're doing courses like that. The students who's courses are lecture based, and assignments are going to be essays, I think most internet connections will be fine with that. I'm sure there's some back of beyonds place with internet that can't manage that but I'd say 95% of those students can learn from home
ACitizenErased wrote: » agar.io is the goto nowadays
Itssoeasy wrote: » So with the acting CMO saying that there are 70 cases linked to pubs in cork, does that mean what Phillip Nolan said about them being unable to trace back after a certain point untrue then ? Why was cork specifically mentioned ?
fin12 wrote: » I think they have mentioned Cork and why the keep mentioning it , is cause they want to lock down the place more than anywhere else. I don’t think it is fair to lock us down just yet as our cases are not as high as when they locked down Dublin and Donegal.
igCorcaigh wrote: » Very busy in the city tonight. Long queues outside wetherspoons too. Is close queueing considered risky even if it is outdoors?
ACitizenErased wrote: » The risk is generally believed to decrease quite significantly outdoors
irishguy1983 wrote: » Bit confused....Seems to be a fair bit of talk about Cork yet our figures are not that bad comparatively speaking....Dublin’s figures are wild/out on control yet not much focus on that...
igCorcaigh wrote: » Our cases have been rising fairly steeply. Lots of focus on Dublin these past couple of weeks!
ACitizenErased wrote: » I was kinda shocked when all the media started asking about Cork at the press conference today when Dublin had 200+, one of their highest ever.
Ludo wrote: » Really can't understand why people are confused/surprised/baffled/shocked. It is not that complicated. Dublin was focus in last few weeks and is now locked down. Now emphasis is on other areas with increasing rates who can still do something to avoid a lockdown.
titan18 wrote: » Des Cahill threw some pics up from the city centre therehttps://twitter.com/CllrDesCahil/status/1310669933110587394?s=20
~Rebel~ wrote: » I tested positive after dinner in Thompsons before they closed down. In fairness, they seemed well organised on the night, tables well spaced out, all staff wearing masks etc, but at the end of the day if you have a few staff members infected it's not gonna end well. Thankfully doesn't seem like I've given it to anyone else. The place was busy that night though, so ya have to wonder how many others picked it up there.
newuser99999 wrote: » The student shaming relating to covid is borderline hilarious. I’ve never seen the UCC / CIT area quieter in my life. Students have been made aware from the middle of August that the learning was to be blended and anything that could be done online would be done online, and plenty of notice would be given for any in person activity to sort out travel arrangements. It’s not a surprise that college is online now.