Okay we've got 1 o'clock here, so I think we will go ahead and get started. Welcome to the final week, week four of our webinar series here on read and write. Today we are going to be looking at the study and the research tools and also review anything that people would like has to address more or talk about more. So. Anyway it's really interesting. Last Tuesday, if you guys remember, we were iced in and Sean braved the weather and came to my house so we could broadcast from my house since the colleges were closed and everything and lo and behold a totally different world out there than this last Tuesday. So Kansas weather. You've got to love it.

One little update, if you'll remember the second week when we are doing the reading tools we were talking about how we were having issues getting the PDF aloud tools to work in the Acrobat reader, the Adobe reader tool instead of going through the PDF tool in read and write. We have figured it out. Kind of stumbled on it by accident. We are looking for something else and found in the main read and write menu if you go way down toward the bottom there's an option there that says use PDF tools in Adobe reader. Excuse me. And we did not have that turned on, or I did not have that turned on or whatever. That was not checked. So we checked that and Sean clicked on the PDF aloud tool and we got the error message that Adobe reader was running in Protected Mode and we wanted to turn off Protected Mode so it could read. And we told yes.

[CART trying to switch off full screen]

 …Today we are going to start the study tools and instead of turning on the study tools on my features toolbar we are going to actually go over to the study skills tool. So on the far right end of the read and write toolbar on the read and write icon, the little purple book icon we are going to click that until the study skills tools toolbar shows up. And this is going to have just the tools that we use for study skills. We are going to start off talking about highlighters.

Highlighters is simply the same thing as if you had a physical textbook in front of you and you had one of those neat little highlighters that you can mark over text and it doesn't erase or block out the text it just marks it in like a yellow, pink or whatever color highlight so that it stands out to you as a way to mark notes. Read and write allows you to do the same kind of thing electronically. So we are going to open this document. We have a document called one for you, one for me, a cute little story I like to work with. And I'm going to show you how this tool can work and what kind of things you can do with it.

One technique that people might use when they are using highlighters is they might want to highlight the topic sentence or the main sentence, the key sentence of a paragraph in one color and highlight supporting sentences or supporting ideas in another color. So that's kind of what we are going to do here, pretend like what we are doing. In the first paragraph we're going to select the main topic there and for this purpose we are going to say that it is, excuse me, there was a huge nut tree by the cemetery fence. And we are going to select that with our mouse, just as if we were going to copy and paste it or something and then we are going to go to the toolbar and click the yellow highlight and that's going to highlight that sentence or that statement in yellow for us. So there is our topic sentence. Then we are going to say there's a supporting sentence. So we are also going to select the phrase to boys, two boys fill the bucket with nuts and sat down beside the fence to divide them. We are going to select all that and click the blue highlighter. So we are going to say this is our supporting sentence for the main sentence we just marked. Then we are going to go down to paragraph number two and kind of do the same thing again. We are going to select, the bucket was so full... I am reading my notes. But they are not in good shape. Sorry. Several rolled out toward the cemetery fence. And we are going to mark that in yellow again because that's kind of the main topic. Then we are going to go down to our third paragraph and you can go through the whole thing. I'm going to do one more just so we have more to work with your. We are going to select a statement... cycling down the road and that is going to go all the way to the last sentence boy, third boy. This is going to be another main topic for us. And so we will mark it in yellow. Then we are going to do, he thought he heard voices from inside the cemetery. And we are going to mark that in blue as a supporting sentence and I think that gives us enough idea to get down what we are doing here. So we have three main sentences and to supporting sentences highlighted. We have five things marked in yellow and blue.

 So we have this marked up. At this point we could simply take this document, print it on a color printer, we could save it, keep the highlights, keep it on a color printer and we would have our hardcopy notes that we could go through and review. So think about using this in something like a chapter out of a textbook or an article that an instructor gives you to read. Something of that nature. You would have it marked up and you could do it electronically. If you realize oops, I did not want to mark that you could select the peace and click the erase highlighter icon on the read and write toolbar and it would take the highlighter off. But anyway, you can mark them up the way you wanted to. Printed up on a color printer, you've got your notes. But the really cool thing about this is that you can actually extract the things that you marked with these different color highlighters into a secondary Word document, so that all you have is just your notes. The key information that you marked. So that is what we are going to go through and do now.

So up on the toolbar we are going to click the collect highlights icon and that's going to give us some options. You can you can tell it to extract all and that is what we are going to do since we have multiple colors here. So we will have multiple colors blue and yellow coming up here. You can set the order in which the highlights are put into the new document. So for example this one we are going to have a yellow main sentence and then a blue supporting sentences. We want those to stay together. So we are going to tell it to do it in the order they appear in the document. And I think that is the default usually.

 But we could also extract, tell it to keep all the yellow stuff together. Excuse me, or we could tell it to extract in the order they were marked in the document. So whatever we marked first would be first in the new document whatever we marked second even if it was at the end of the original document would be next. So it could do it in any of those ways. But we are going to do it, keep it in the same order they were in the original document.

 Then you can also tell it how you want the colors broken out.Do you want paragraph breaks, column breaks, page breaks, how do you want the different colored sections to be broken out. And we are going to stick with paragraph breaks on that. And we are going to go ahead and check it to include the bibliography. One thing I will say about the bibliography, you do have to be careful. For example if you are doing this from a webpage, the webpage bibliography may be the company that created the webpage rather than whoever wrote the article. For example in this document I did not write this story but I created it, I put it into this word document so when we do the bibliography information you will see that it actually has me as the author of the story which is not I just created it into a Word document.

 So we are going to create the bibliography. It also gives you the option APA, MLA or Harvard. It does not give us the Chicago option which kind of surprised me but it does give me those three. So we are going to tell it APA since that's what I'm used to doing anyway. We are not going to check to do multiple documents. You can actually have multiple word documents or Word documents in Internet Explorer documents open at the same time. You can highlight in multiple documents and extract all of those highlights into one document. So, for example if I'm reading an article on the Internet and I'm also matching that with things in my chapter in my word document that I can extract those notes all into one word document and everything sticks together. One from my Internet article, one from my word document. We are going to click the okay button and you will see that a new word document is created. And the just the pieces that we had highlighted are going to show up in the new word document and they are going to be in the same order that they were in the original document. So we will have yellow, blue, yellow yellow blue I believe is the order it goes in because I don't think our sentence main sentence had a supporting sentence for it. We can print this and I can see which are my main statement in which am I supporting statements for the, according to the highlighters. Other things we are doing perhaps as you are reading through the chapter you are marking things in yellow that you want to study for the test and you are marking things in blue that you want to pull out to use in the term paper. And then maybe you are also, there are things which you are not really sure what it means and so you're going to mark those in green so you can take those and ask the teacher about them.

So we are going to go back to our original document, close that one out. We are not going to save it. We are going to pretend like that's what we are doing this time. We are extracting yellow things to study for the test and blue things are what we want to ask the teacher about. So this time we have our highlight. Already there. We are going to click the collect highlights and this time we are going to go ahead and tell it to collect all highlights but we are going to tell it to put in order, group them by color. Okay. And that's really the only other change we have to make.

 So now go ahead and click our okay button.And we have a new document and now we see that all the yellow stuff we have together will be one piece and all the blue stuff should be together in a different part of the document. Did you tell me this would happen?

 Yes

 Okay I haven't done this in a while but I want to double check it's done what I suppose, another thing that we could of done for this particular scenario, we could have said only extract the yellow and create a document that just had our study notes and then went back and said only extract the blue and had a different document with just our notes to ask the teacher. So there's another way you could of done this. So there are several ways, several techniques you can use for using the highlight colors. And it's really depending on the person. What they, how their technique for studying, how the technique for marking up works for them. But it's really I think an awesome tool to be able to extract things from one document and just shrink it down and make one little summary piece.

Okay we are going to select the entire document. And we are going to click on the erase highlights button so that we can get rid of all that highlighting for now. And so we are back in our original document. The next tool I want to show you, oh, let me quickly ask are there any questions about all the highlighter stuff?

Okay. I will go ahead and chat on. If you do have a question just pop it in the chat window and Sean will but me upside the head and let me know there's a question. So all right. Another cool thing you can do with these highlighters is you can create a vocabulary list. So we are going to pretend like we are creating a vocabulary list to study and we are going to mark some words. The first word we are going to mark is outskirts. Then we are going to mark tree. I'm sorry. Once we select and we are going to mark them and it doesn't really matter what highlighter color you use. Whatever your preference is. John's favorite color is green so he's probably

 Going to mark these in green.

 I will mark in all the colors.

 We are going to mark tree and we will mark cemetery and we will mark fence. Excuse me, and again it really doesn't matter which color you use because that won't have any effect on what we are doing with the vocabulary list. So, once we have our words selected and it really doesn't matter how many you mark, you can mark as many as you want in a document we are going to go and click the vocabulary icon on the read and write toolbar and it's going to come up and show us our list basically saying review this and make sure it is a list that you want and it also gives us a list of options we can do. We can give the list a title. I think that is still an option in 11. Isn't it? Yes okay so we can give the list a title. So, say chapter 3 study words or something of that nature. And then we will click okay, well, not yet. We can also select whether or not to use pictures. And I believe that is the main settings isn't it?

 And you can also add in words if you wanted to just manually add in a word. So I will go ahead and add cycling.

 Sure, why not

 So you just type in your word there and you see cycling is down there and if you need to you can also edit these. You cannot delete them from here but you can go in and edit them here. So just something else to keep in mind.

 So for example if you mark the word, say for example it was the word trees, but you only want to tree, you could edit to take off the S or something of that nature. So we have the word selected and we have the list they are and we are going to go ahead and click the okay button and a new document is created there and it does a table. What it does is in the first calm of the table it gives you your word and the second column of the table it gives you the definition from the read and write dictionary that you have selected. So if you have the basic dictionary selected it's going to give you a basic definition. If you have the advanced it will give you advanced. If you have it set to web, then you will get the dictionary definition from the web. But you don't have to do the web. You can do the basic one.

 The third column over if available it will put a picture from the read and write picture dictionary. So outskirts probably that is an interesting picture if there is one.

 I do pull up one, it's a series of circles kind of like a bull's-eye and it's highlighting the area on the edge. So like the last circular area.

 Interesting. Okay. Anyway it gives you a picture of the item in the third column and the last column is an empty column for notes. And so if the definition from the read and write dictionary isn't quite exactly what you need or maybe there's a little bit more you want to add to it, maybe the instructor gave you a little extra information to put with that you can add that into the notes there on the end. So that if you have anything else you want to add to it. So again, now you've got this. You can save it. You can print it and have a study list ready to go.

So that's basically the two highlighter features that you can do.

 One other tool that you can work with here, I'm not going to demonstrate it, I'm just going to tell you about it, excuse me, is the summary tool. So say you have a 30 or 40 page Word document. And when you get to college, believe me, some of the chapters can get that long very easily. But, say you have a 30 or 40 page document but you are not sure if it has all the information you need, if it's really talking about what you want and you don't want to read the entire thing to find out. You can use the summary tool to shrink that document down to a manageable size. So for example if it is a 40 page document and I told it to do 10% it's going to shrink down and pull the 40 pages down into about four pages and it's just going to include what it thinks is key information. And the few times that I have full with this a little bit it actually did a very good job of just pulling in important information. The more you shrink it down, the less information you are going to get. But it's a pretty nice tool if you find a large document you need to quickly review or skim it is a good way to scroll down to skim it.

 Already, that is the three things I was going to talk about. So I'm going to slide out of the picture and let Sean take over the next three.

 You can stay in the picture with me.

 I will make faces in the back

 We are going to switch to the research features toolbar by clicking the purple read and write icon at the top. You can also get there again from the drop-down menu and going to the toolbar and selecting it directly from there. The first thing we are going to look at is the fact finder. So you will see that option here. I'm going to show you how it works and we will go into different options that you have for this. So we are going to select... let's go with St. Peter's. So we are going to just select this. And once you select it we are going to click on the fact finder and this is going to pull up using Google is the current setting in chrome and we are going to see some information on St. Peter.

 So you don't have to use Google. You can change the search options. So if you prefer you can just by going to the drop-down and going to search using. And what's really cool on here is there's a lot of different things you can do. If you're looking for books specifically it has ISBN and Barnes & Noble's. If you are looking for news you may want to search for those components, general knowledge, translation computers, Internet, we are just going to stick with general for now and you will see general search options.

 So let's go ahead and switch this over to Yahoo. I will close out and we will do the same thing, St. Peter is selected. And my computer is thinking. So now when we run it you're going to see the Yahoo search. And so we are going to go back and I'm going to go to the Yahoo one for now and leave that out. If you want to add additional search options you can do that as well by going into the fact finder options. And you can change default again or add other entries. If you want to use bing are these other ones or search for ones that are not listed maybe we want to list bing in here the entry already exists I believe it was under computers and technology for bing but you can add these into additional areas for search options if you have of specific search engine that is not currently on the list. So this is something to keep in mind there.

 So, factfinder just helps you go and find facts very quickly and easily. I'm going to go ahead and switch back. Google. And then we are going to use St. Peter still and we are going to move on to the fact folder because once you find the facts you want to be able to do something with them. And that's where the fact folder is going to come into play. So we go in, use the factfinder and then we will go to, we will click on this link. And click on this link so let's back up and pick a different link.

... [inaudible]

  No... not particularly. We're just going to go to this church in KCK, right down the road from us. Let's say in here we want to extract some of this information and have access to it. We are going to start by selecting some text. And then we are going to use our fact folder. So, once we click on this it is going to pull up the information. We've got a title and that's kind of a long title so let's just say, here is one. St. Peter's, KCK. It's got the date, the offer, information from the sources, the category, you can new category and say these are things we found specifically using Google searches in St. Petersburg. As you can see we do have churches and sent peters already in there but I want to show you that you can add additional ones. And everything we do we are going to just put in the Google search, St. Peter's. And then description and we will call this a welcome statement. That is pretty much what it is on the landing page for this website. We are going to click okay. And now you will see a little icon pop up on the bottom right for second showing that it went into that folder. And we go in and review the facts... so, isolate that. It will show that we currently have one fact in here. I'm going to close that because we are going to add a couple other things.

 Aside from just getting the text you can also get images. So to grab an image you will use the drop-down menu, add web image and select the image. So we are going to call this... we will call it St. Peter's. And again we are going to put it in the same category Google search and okay, description. Inside, we will say inside. So now you see has been added to the fact folder now we go into review [our review] facts and it we see if we go here to the Google search, St. Peter's drop-down section, so that specific folder for it it now has both of our facts in here. I'm going to make this a little bit bigger so I can show you a little bit better what this actually looks like.

 So you've got a few tools Across, you can acquire a new fact and you can follow the link if there is a link... Display, edit the information and export all the facts to the word document which we will do in a moment. But I want to show you that you can access all of your facts that you have at once. And this will show you all the facts that we have collected. We've done this the whole time so we have some other information from St. Peter's and different text along with some different images that we used before. And if we go to, previously we had churches. So here's what is in our churches folder. St. Peter's Parish folder, which has nothing and then the Google search St. Peter's, which is the newest one which we have the two different facts assigned to. So, just some different cool information in there. And then your tools, same information that we just saw. If we wanted to edit these or do anything we could.

 As far as the factfinder In the fact folder, getting them over to word, let's go, the search is probably going to be one of the main benefits to this. Again we have the bibliography format. Since Robert likes APA so much we are going to go with MLA.

 Anything to be contrary.

 Click okay... and now we have our new were document with our facts in here. So, pretty cool feature to be able to isolate and manage a lot of information you find on the Internet using the factfinder, not that you have to use the factfinder to get this information but they do correlate pretty well together and it's a great way to look at information and organize that information and keep it together and be able to use whenever you are ready to use it. Robert, do you have anything to add on to either one of those?

 One thing to keep in mind the more images you put into the fact folder the longer it will take to process into word because it takes a little longer to transfer images over into word than just plain text. So, but that, if that is what you are needing this is a good way to organize it and have it go. And also again like I said earlier on the bibliography information on the word document that I was using you may also find the bibliography information here is not 100% accurate so you may want to double check facts in that regard when you are selecting facts from a webpage to make sure that it is crediting the right people.

 The last tool we are going to look at is called the fact mapper and it's pretty awesome. To get going go up to the fact mapper. Icon, click on that. And we need to allow access because it's going to a webpage. So this pulls up, and you will see Internet Explorer, Robert do need to be connected to the Internet use the feature is that correct?

 Actually you don't, it's a local.

 So I'm going to try to get this out of the way. Okay. Sorry, my... videos of everybody I have is trying to take over too much of my page here. So the fact mapper is a brainstorming tool kind of like when you are younger and you select a little bubble in the middle and you create it and have all these branches coming out, coming out with different ideas but the cool thing here is you can manipulate the way they are organized, make a lot of different connections, made links, delete links reroute, it's a lot of fun. We are going to play with the--- general one that we go with and so we're going to add our element, the first element is going to be, we are going to call it picnic. So, with our picnic we know we are going to need certain items, let's say we are thinking about it and we want to add food, drinks and other random stuff we might need. We will use those three fun categories. So when we select picnic we add another element could you see that it adds a connection automatically. So we are going to go with food, add another element for drinks and add one more for... we can drag these around and create more space for other areas if we want to, but let's say for the food, and feel free to join in on the text what food should we have for a picnic. Going to start off with let's say, hamburgers. Hamburgers would have been interesting as well and if you want to throw some in here, feel free. And let's go with chips. Why not. So the way I'm doing this right now you see that I'm clicking the element for each one. You don't have to do it that way. You can use this brainstorm mode which lets you& enter and you go through it really quickly. So if you have a lot of thoughts and you don't want to deal with having this new element button and picking it every time this is a great feature to do. So click the drinks let's go water, lemonade go, iced tea... and so you see that is kool-aid

 I just used to drink it, that's all I know.

 That's a really efficient way to control that and let's go ahead and throw in some stuff we will do the brainstorm mode and I like it because it looks like a little tornado. So if I draw topic and I talk about tornado mode I'm actually talking about brainstorm mode. Ice... and let's say I put pickles over here for some reason. But let's say I put pickles over here and I really want it with food. What I'm going to do is break this link I come over to the icon and I delete a link, so you delete the connection but you still leave your element and then I'm going to connect that to the food element. So I will click on food. Add a new link pickles, and you see now it is under pickles where it should be. The main thing to keep in mind if you're breaking links and adding links and elements and things like that, you want this to flow the appropriate way. So this little arrows each one of the lines shows the direction that it is going. So the picnic goes to the food and under food category would be pickles, hammers, hot dogs and chips. You would not want it to be where the food is coming from both the picnic and also for some reason the chips being higher up on the hierarchy when you organize them because there's a lot of different ways to organize the information but keep in mind the links do need to run the appropriate way.

 So if you want to organize it a certain way, range the facts right here maybe four different options, left to right, right to left. Bottom-up or top-down. Let's start with the left to right. And click okay. And this will organize everything like so. I prefer the top to bottom so let's do that, now we can see it's all structured from the top to the bottom.

A couple other things I want to do in here, let's go ahead and actually... I like top to bottom left but we are going to set it up to the right for what I'm going to share now. You can add images into these so you have a search feature over here. Bring that up and let's say we want to use hamburgers. We will see hamburgers. All you do is click and drag and drop it into the element. Let's come down here and do some other stuff. Water, napkins why not. Actually, let's just make that that will be fun and let's add one more thing. Let's add lemonade. So now we have images in here and you can go through and fill all of these up as long as there is a result for what you are searching for. And what I want to do now is look at what we do with this now that we've created this. We can save it and come back later if we want to but we have open existing ones, creating new, you could also just print this diagram but we are going to export it over to word. So, we will just, this is kind of hidden over here. You will not see those options until you click a file and see it slide to the left and slide back. I'm not sure if screen sharing shows that. Or not. Though, whenever you want to start saving it or anything you go to the file menu and it will pull up these additional options. We will export the outline view to Microsoft Word. And yes we are going to open it. The editing button there. Hang on one second. Let me get to where... once you get to editing it will pull over the balls along with the images. So now you have a really good way to have all your information organize kind of an outline format and you have these fun little images to go along with the information.

So it's a really fun tool to use. That is about the extent of it. And we will see if Robert has any additional comments on the fact mapper.

 No I think that's pretty good.

 All right I'm going to go ahead and close this down.

 One thing we forgot to add was the ants.

[Laughter]

 We did forget to add the ants. You cannot have a picnic without ants. All right. And that is all we have.

 I think so that covers it. So we still have plenty of time. About 15 minutes. So if you have any questions of stuff we have done in the past, the previous weeks that you want to go back over again or if you want us to do anything else with the things we showed you today we can certainly go back over any of that and try to answer questions for you.

 Not seeing any questions come through yet.

 One quick thing, on the... fact mapper... I can't get my tongue untangled oh my gosh, on the fact mapper, the pictures they were showing you can actually add your own pictures in there as well. So say you were doing a an article on your family tree, your family history or something like that as you are making a map you can pull in pictures of your own family to use and then pull up those over to the word document so you will have your picture right with the person as you talk about your parents and go to your grandparents and back up to your great-grandparents and back through history. You can have the pictures to go along with those individuals you are talking about.

 All right, and still no questions from the crew.

 Let's go show... one thing we did not take time to do earlier was the talking calculator.

 Okay.

 I want to show the conversion tool that I think is really helpful. Can really be of help. So the talking calculator... did you find it on the toolbar

 I am about to.

 I think it is... you may have to go to all features to get it. All right so it is right here on the toolbar.

 So, this calculator, you can use it as a basic or function calculator or set it to be a scientific calculator. And it has a drop-down menu. And in the drop-down menu you can find the converter. See what I'm talking about?

 Yes

 In the converter it gives you lots and lots of options that you can convert.

 We've got links, mass, velocity, time, temperature volume, and for each one of those it also has the... millimeters, centimeters

 The matrix, standard... so, all of those things you can use to convert. If you are cooking, sometimes people find it difficult to convert, you know how many ounces to how many cups to how many grams to whatever. This is a neat tool for using those kinds of conversions. And then in the calculator itself you can have it work several ways. You can have it speak the numbers as you click on them. So say we are going to put 120 divided by 2. As you click the mouse on the numbers it will speak the number out loud, or you can turn the feature off. You can have it speak the result when you click the equals button or you cannot depending on what you want. So some people really don't want the voice feedback. They just want to have a calculator they can easily use. It also will let you save and you can print out your calculation so if you need to show work say, for your homework what did you do, when you can simply save this, you can actually copy and paste right into your Word document. So if there is a calculation you are wanting to do you could pin the results right into a Word document. So, really handy little tool. When I don't generally spend a lot of time on, but I thought I would go ahead and mention it today. If time allowed.

 Another cool tool that some people might find helpful is the masking tool. If you have somebody who is highly distractible and especially on the web when they are trying to read the web and you've got a little icon that pops up over there or you have a little graphic up here, types of things that we all find distracting and sometimes annoying on webpages, by using the masking tool, when it's actually reading it's going to blot out the screen and shadow out the rest of the screen and only make visible the words that are being spoken and highlighted. So the person trying to read is not being distracted by the blinking icon that pops up on either side or by the images that scroll down the page as you are going down to a Word document or things of that nature.

And of course there are tons of different settings to go along with any of those.

 I was going to show them some of the settings were so they could see that.

 All right. Well I hope everybody has gotten something out of the last four weeks on these webinars. I know that we've had a few technical glitches as we went. In fact it was funny because a little bit ago before we started we were bringing up the laptop to have is our backup and Jake said oh great Tuesday and guess what just came in, updates for Windows. We were not sure if the laptop was going to be available if we needed it today. But it seems to have stuck with us pretty good. But anyway. If you do have questions, Sean is going to go ahead and put our contact information in the chat window again. Just to be consistent. And if you do have comments, questions or anything that you want to talk about with read and write in the future you know, after you leave today, feel free to email any of us and we will get back to you as best we can. We thank EASI for sponsoring this again, letting us do this and taking up their time and be a part of this. We really enjoy read and write. It's an awesome tool and we like demonstrating it. So this is the first time we've done it as a webinar. Like this. Usually we have it in a hands-on workshop and do it in a series like this.

 Beth just said we rock. Thank you so much.

 Thank you, Beth. Anyway, Sean and I do both love the program a lot so if you have questions about it or want to know ways that our students are using it or what have you feel free to email us and we will send us thoughts and answers for you

 This is Norm and I want to thank you guys for a lot of hard work over this last month and I've never used this tool, that's really complex and I know it will take a while to learn it [audio fading out] showing it to you step-by-step so this is really useful and we will have this on the web for the indefinite future. And so the archive for this series will be on the web at EASi.cc/archive/beach2018/resouces.htm. And EASI gives one or two or more webinars every month and you can keep up with our schedule of coming events. We have one in March and one in April. And hope to have more in March and April, but at the moment there are two of them. So you can go to the EASI homepage which is EASI.cc and click on webinars. We do also give month-long courses. So again you go to the website and click on courses and see some of those features. I want to thank everybody who is here. I want to thank everyone who comes to the archive. And especially thanks to our friends in Kansas. Thank you, guys.

 Thank you.

 Thank you, we enjoyed it.