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<noinclude>{{TOCright}}
=Moodle "what you paint is what you get"=
[[Category:SchoolServer]]
[[Category:Software ideas]]</noinclude>


Moodle is a
== Moodle ==
scope
docs
platform/lang
workflow


Moodle is a very popular Course Management System / Learning Management System. It is the "main face" of the webbased tools that the School Server offers. More info on moodle
=Moodle - simpler workshop module=


* http://moodle.org/ - in the 'Using Moodle' course, the 'General developer forum' is where developer discussions happen.
=wwwoffle=
* http://docs.moodle.org/ - this has a sizable section for developers.
• integrate wwwoffle with scripts to support sneakernet.
• add "rproxy" extension support to wwwoffle


Work on Moodle is split on


* Making Moodle better for young children. Moodle is originally designed for tertiary and secondary levels. Improving the UI for children is a priority.
=Proxy - rproxy=
* Making moodle better for learning based on Social Constructivism practices - see http://docs.moodle.org/en/Philosophy
scope
* Integrating Moodle with other tools
docs
platform/lang
workflow


To understand some of these tasks, you probably need to install and explore Moodle:
=ejabberd - Erlang=
scope
docs
platform/lang
workflow


* http://docs.moodle.org/en/Install
=Wikipedia / Wikislice=
* http://docs.moodle.org/en/Teacher_documentation - it is important to think as a '''teacher''' and as a '''student''' when exploring moodle.
scope

docs
''Skills: Web app programming, PHP, SQL (PostgreSQL/MySQL), JS, XHTML''
platform/lang

workflow
== Moodle: What you paint is what you get==

Most of online (webbased) interaction is via forms -- a text-heavy approach. Young children find it easier to paint and draw.

If we can switch the '''WYSISWYG''' HTML editors in forms with a '''paint here''' facility, then we make webbased tools easier for them.

* Additional notes at http://wiki.laptop.org/go/XS_Moodle_design#What_You_Paint_Is_What_You_Get_editor
* An initial exploration of existing tools http://moodle.org/mod/forum/discuss.php?d=110902

Technical notes:

* Moodle is using a WYSIWYG editor called TinyMCE - that is a possible '''integration point'''.
* Implementation idea: write a vector-based "paint" facility in JS that runs in the browser.
* Implementation idea: write a vector or bitmap paint facility in Flash, bearing in mind that OLPC ships Gnash instead of Adobe's Flash.
* Performance matters - the OLPC XO has a relatively low power CPU, so image editing has to be tuned / optimised to be responsive.

The complexity of this project is high.

==Moodle - blog-style course format==

In Moodle, the most important page is the "course page", which acts as a hub in a hub-and-spoke navigation strategy. The structure and user workflow with the page is controlled by a pluggable bit of code, called a '''course format'''.

The default course format is good for courses where the teacher can plan ahead. For day-to-day teaching, as is often done in primary schools, a different format is preferrable. The goal of this project is to deliver a blog-style day-to-day format as described here: http://wiki.laptop.org/go/XS_Moodle_design#Topics-style_course_format.2C_geared_for_a_year-long

The complexity of this project is medium-low.

===Moodle - simpler workshop module===

The 'Workshop' module in Moodle is excellent from a [http://docs.moodle.org/en/Philosophy Social Constructivist] point of view, and we would like to be able to use it for OLPC.

This module is specially nice in that helps a teacher ask students to perform an open ended task, and then get students to assess and help eachother.

It suffers however of 2 problems

* The code is old and unclear.
* It is overburdened with options.

A newly implemented module that implements a subset of the Workshop functionality and follows current coding practices would be hugely popular with OLPC users and Moodle users.

The complexity of this project is medium-high.

==Moodle - offline implementation using GoogleGears==

See http://moodle.org/mod/forum/discuss.php?d=107920

The complexity of this project is medium-high.

===Moodle - other projects===

For generally interesting projects, see http://docs.moodle.org/en/Projects_for_new_developers - they are of varying relevance to OLPC.

==WWWOFFLE==

[http://www.gedanken.demon.co.uk/wwwoffle/ WWWOFFLE] is an "offline proxy" for servers that have intermittent connectivity. This covers many School Servers in OLPC deployments...

''Skills: C, Linux network programming, autoconf, make''

===Teach WWWOFFLE to speak rproxy===

See the rproxy notes on this page. This project is to add support to WWWOFFLE for the HTTP extension that rproxy implements, so that WWWOFFLE can talk with an "upstream" rproxy.

Most intermittent connections are also very low bandwidth connections...

==Teach WWWOFFLE to support asynchronous searches==

See http://www.nilshettich.com/olpcblog/?p=29

==Make WWWOFFLE work for disconnected schools==

The [http://www.wizzy.org.za/ Wizzy Digital Courier] project has some useful patches that extend WWWOFFLE to support sneakernet.

* Review and apply the patches
** Work on them so that they are acceptable to merge into the WWWOFFLE project proper?
* Integrate the workflow with Moodle and the XS, so that
** User management is done via Moodle
** USB key handling integrates with the automatic USB key handling on the XS
** Logs, status, pendind requests and other reports are visible in Moodle
** Alerts ("content you requested has arrived!") appear for Moodle users

==rproxy==

rproxy is a proof-of-concept proxy developed by Andrew '''tridge''' Tridgell (of Samba and rsync fame). It extends the HTTP protocol with rsync-like smarts. This has an enormous impact for users on bandwidth constrained connections.

The existing rproxy implementation works, and is good for simple single-user usage. For OLPC we are looking for a more mature HTTP proxy that is reliable, fits in limited memory, etc.

More about rproxy

* Project page - http://rproxy.samba.org/ - note that rproxy works fairly well today for a single user. It is enlightening to try it out, and sniff the http traffic.
* Andrew Tridgell discussing rproxy - unfortunately, he has not had the time to work actively on it, but has promised to help and support anyone working on it: http://www.builderau.com.au/news/soa/rproxy-set-for-revival-/0,339028227,339286817,00.htm?feed=pt_lca

''Skills: C, Linux network programming''

===rproxy: revive and polish===

The rproxy code can be taken forward. From conversations with Tridge, the situation is as follows

* The "stable" branch of rproxy works well for single user, it would need to...
** learn how to "stream" content through -- currently it only serves content to the client once it has completed fetching it
** to be ported to use the current librsync (as its built against an old librsync)
** tested and tuned for multi-user environments, probably memory usage needs to be limited somehow
** tested with current HTTP services -- as it was created and used in an era before AJAX and the likes of Gmail
* there is an incomplete "development" branch of rproxy with an incomplete port to a more modern librsync

The complexity of this project is high.

===rproxy: integrate into a mature http proxy===

Take rproxy as a reference implementation, and add support for the HTTP extension it implements to

* Apache's mod_proxy/mod_cache
** An interesting subproject would be to implement a "filter" style module. Martin Poole outlined it [http://rproxy.sourceforge.net/doc/notes/design.txt here], though at the time Apache 1.3.x did not support filters.
* Squid
** Currently, Squid has severe memory footprint issues that make it unsuitable for long-term usage for OLPC. Work on Squid would necessitate resolving these issues.

The complexity of this project is high.

==ejabberd - Erlang==

[http://www.ejabberd.im/ ejabberd] is the leading Jabber/XMPP server. The OLPC School Server uses ejabberd for its integration with the XOs.

Some draft project ideas - poke Martin for more...

* Extend mod_ctlextra to provide more control
* Integrate mod_xmlrpc to expose the same facilities as mod_ctlextra, write a PHP library that wraps around all the mod_xmlrpc functionality

''Skills: Erlang, parallel programming, network programming''


==SchoolTool - Proyecto Alba==

It would be nice to add an administration tool for the school principal / teacher to manage courses, grades. grade cards, student lists, etc....

[http://www.schooltool.org SchoolTool] - Only for ubuntu, we should check if we can integrate it, but it should not be an issue.
[http://www.proyectoalba.com.ar Proyecto Alba] - Only spanish up to where I know.

Latest revision as of 00:59, 11 August 2010

Moodle

Moodle is a very popular Course Management System / Learning Management System. It is the "main face" of the webbased tools that the School Server offers. More info on moodle

Work on Moodle is split on

  • Making Moodle better for young children. Moodle is originally designed for tertiary and secondary levels. Improving the UI for children is a priority.
  • Making moodle better for learning based on Social Constructivism practices - see http://docs.moodle.org/en/Philosophy
  • Integrating Moodle with other tools

To understand some of these tasks, you probably need to install and explore Moodle:

Skills: Web app programming, PHP, SQL (PostgreSQL/MySQL), JS, XHTML

Moodle: What you paint is what you get

Most of online (webbased) interaction is via forms -- a text-heavy approach. Young children find it easier to paint and draw.

If we can switch the WYSISWYG HTML editors in forms with a paint here facility, then we make webbased tools easier for them.

Technical notes:

  • Moodle is using a WYSIWYG editor called TinyMCE - that is a possible integration point.
  • Implementation idea: write a vector-based "paint" facility in JS that runs in the browser.
  • Implementation idea: write a vector or bitmap paint facility in Flash, bearing in mind that OLPC ships Gnash instead of Adobe's Flash.
  • Performance matters - the OLPC XO has a relatively low power CPU, so image editing has to be tuned / optimised to be responsive.

The complexity of this project is high.

Moodle - blog-style course format

In Moodle, the most important page is the "course page", which acts as a hub in a hub-and-spoke navigation strategy. The structure and user workflow with the page is controlled by a pluggable bit of code, called a course format.

The default course format is good for courses where the teacher can plan ahead. For day-to-day teaching, as is often done in primary schools, a different format is preferrable. The goal of this project is to deliver a blog-style day-to-day format as described here: http://wiki.laptop.org/go/XS_Moodle_design#Topics-style_course_format.2C_geared_for_a_year-long

The complexity of this project is medium-low.

Moodle - simpler workshop module

The 'Workshop' module in Moodle is excellent from a Social Constructivist point of view, and we would like to be able to use it for OLPC.

This module is specially nice in that helps a teacher ask students to perform an open ended task, and then get students to assess and help eachother.

It suffers however of 2 problems

  • The code is old and unclear.
  • It is overburdened with options.

A newly implemented module that implements a subset of the Workshop functionality and follows current coding practices would be hugely popular with OLPC users and Moodle users.

The complexity of this project is medium-high.

Moodle - offline implementation using GoogleGears

See http://moodle.org/mod/forum/discuss.php?d=107920

The complexity of this project is medium-high.

Moodle - other projects

For generally interesting projects, see http://docs.moodle.org/en/Projects_for_new_developers - they are of varying relevance to OLPC.

WWWOFFLE

WWWOFFLE is an "offline proxy" for servers that have intermittent connectivity. This covers many School Servers in OLPC deployments...

Skills: C, Linux network programming, autoconf, make

Teach WWWOFFLE to speak rproxy

See the rproxy notes on this page. This project is to add support to WWWOFFLE for the HTTP extension that rproxy implements, so that WWWOFFLE can talk with an "upstream" rproxy.

Most intermittent connections are also very low bandwidth connections...

Teach WWWOFFLE to support asynchronous searches

See http://www.nilshettich.com/olpcblog/?p=29

Make WWWOFFLE work for disconnected schools

The Wizzy Digital Courier project has some useful patches that extend WWWOFFLE to support sneakernet.

  • Review and apply the patches
    • Work on them so that they are acceptable to merge into the WWWOFFLE project proper?
  • Integrate the workflow with Moodle and the XS, so that
    • User management is done via Moodle
    • USB key handling integrates with the automatic USB key handling on the XS
    • Logs, status, pendind requests and other reports are visible in Moodle
    • Alerts ("content you requested has arrived!") appear for Moodle users

rproxy

rproxy is a proof-of-concept proxy developed by Andrew tridge Tridgell (of Samba and rsync fame). It extends the HTTP protocol with rsync-like smarts. This has an enormous impact for users on bandwidth constrained connections.

The existing rproxy implementation works, and is good for simple single-user usage. For OLPC we are looking for a more mature HTTP proxy that is reliable, fits in limited memory, etc.

More about rproxy

Skills: C, Linux network programming

rproxy: revive and polish

The rproxy code can be taken forward. From conversations with Tridge, the situation is as follows

  • The "stable" branch of rproxy works well for single user, it would need to...
    • learn how to "stream" content through -- currently it only serves content to the client once it has completed fetching it
    • to be ported to use the current librsync (as its built against an old librsync)
    • tested and tuned for multi-user environments, probably memory usage needs to be limited somehow
    • tested with current HTTP services -- as it was created and used in an era before AJAX and the likes of Gmail
  • there is an incomplete "development" branch of rproxy with an incomplete port to a more modern librsync

The complexity of this project is high.

rproxy: integrate into a mature http proxy

Take rproxy as a reference implementation, and add support for the HTTP extension it implements to

  • Apache's mod_proxy/mod_cache
    • An interesting subproject would be to implement a "filter" style module. Martin Poole outlined it here, though at the time Apache 1.3.x did not support filters.
  • Squid
    • Currently, Squid has severe memory footprint issues that make it unsuitable for long-term usage for OLPC. Work on Squid would necessitate resolving these issues.

The complexity of this project is high.

ejabberd - Erlang

ejabberd is the leading Jabber/XMPP server. The OLPC School Server uses ejabberd for its integration with the XOs.

Some draft project ideas - poke Martin for more...

  • Extend mod_ctlextra to provide more control
  • Integrate mod_xmlrpc to expose the same facilities as mod_ctlextra, write a PHP library that wraps around all the mod_xmlrpc functionality

Skills: Erlang, parallel programming, network programming


SchoolTool - Proyecto Alba

It would be nice to add an administration tool for the school principal / teacher to manage courses, grades. grade cards, student lists, etc....

SchoolTool - Only for ubuntu, we should check if we can integrate it, but it should not be an issue. Proyecto Alba - Only spanish up to where I know.