Video conferencing system for distance education

Author(s):  
Chandra Bhushan Kumar ◽  
Anjali Potnis ◽  
Shefali Gupta
2021 ◽  
pp. 91-104
Author(s):  
Vesna Dimitrievska RISTOVSKA ◽  
Emil STANKOV ◽  
Petar SEKULOSKI

The newly emerged corona crisis in our country, but also much broader – on the entire planet, caused by the pandemic scale of COVID-19 virus, dictated the need for adjustment of the teaching and examination process of many university courses. At our institution, Faculty of Computer Science and Engineering (FCSE) in Skopje, starting from March 17, 2020, until today (March 2021), classes and exams are completely realized through distance learning systems, i.e. using the BigBlueButton video conferencing system, implemented in the Courses and Exams student services – the official FCSE websites on the Moodle e-learning platform. For all faculty courses, lectures, auditory and laboratory exercises, colloquia and exams, all take place via a video conferencing system for distance education. In this paper we present a comparative analysis of the conduction of some courses at FCSE in classical conditions, as opposed to the conditions with distance education. We have considered the analysis mainly from the aspect of the approach to teaching, as well as from the aspect of exam conduction and achieved exam results. The analysis of those aspects leads us to conclusions about several positive and negative sides that we noticed in distance education compared to the classical conditions of classes and exams. Our findings also may apply on the organization of online contests, especially in informatics.


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 113-116
Author(s):  
Nur Khalidah Dahlan

Technologies applied in court is considered as a new type of method to settle dispute. Settlement of any dispute thru technology in court shall benefit all; Judges, Lawyers and parties concerned. Malaysian court especially in Sabah and Sarawak have dealt civil dispute cases thru technology approach. These development shows promising ways to decrease backlog cases that had been experienced in courts throughout the years. Hence, this paper suggested that the technology method apply in civil court particularly in Sabah and Sarawak court should adopted too in the Islamic finance disputes. It is important for everyone’s future that we study the current technology in order to develop more effective settlement for Islamic Finance dispute for Malaysia.


2000 ◽  
Vol 21 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 169-175 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. P. A. Baak ◽  
P. J. van Diest ◽  
G. A. Meijer

Aim: To evaluate the feasibility of an inexpensive, generally applicable video‐conferencing system for frozen section telepathology (TP).Methods: A commercially widely available PC‐based dynamic video‐conferencing system (PictureTel LIVE, model PCS 100) has been evaluated, using two, four and six ISDN channels (128–384 kilobits per second (kbs)) bandwidths. 129 frozen sections have been analyzed which were classified by TP as benign, uncertain (the remark probably benign, or probably malignant was allowed), malignant, or not acceptable image quality. The TP results were compared with the original frozen section diagnosis and final paraffin diagnosis.Results: Only 384 kbs (3 ISDN‐2 lines) resulted in acceptable speed and quality of microscope images, and synchronous image/speech transfer. In one of the frozen section cases (0.7%), TP image quality was classified as not acceptable, leaving 128 frozen sections for the analysis. Five of these cases were uncertain by TP, and also deferred by frozen section procedure (FS). One more benign and three malignant FS cases were classified as uncertain by TP. Three additional cases were uncertain by FS, but benign according to TP (in agreement with the final diagnosis). In one case, FS diagnosis was uncertain but TP was malignant (in agreement with the final diagnosis). Thus, test efficiency (i.e., cases with complete agreement) was 120/128 (93.8%, Kappa = 0.88) between FS and TP. Sensitivity was 93.5%, specificity 98.6%, positive and negative predictive values were 97.7% and 96.0%. Between TP and final diagnosis agreement was even higher. More importantly, there was not a single discrepancy as to benign‐malignant. Moreover, there was a clear learning effect: 5 of the 8 FS/TP discrepancies occurred in the first 42 cases (5/42=11.9%), the remaining 3 in the following 86 cases (3/86=3.5%).Discussion: The results are encouraging. However, TP evaluation is time‐consuming (5–15 min for one case instead of 2–4 min although speed went up with more experience) and is more tiring. The system has the following technical drawbacks: no possibility to point at objects or areas of interest in the life image at the other end, resolution (rarely) may become suboptimal (blocky), storage of images evaluated (which is essential for legal reasons) is not easy and no direct control of a remote motorized microscope. Yet, all users were positive about the system both for telepathology and personal contact by video‐conferencing. Conclusion: With a relatively simple videoconferencing system, accurate dynamic telepathology frozen section diagnosis can be obtained without false positive or negative results, although a limited number of uncertain cases will have to be accepted.


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