Connected on 2007-06-29 14:00:00
from Cupterino, California , USA
- 2:22 pm
- Teacherwow the presets look pretty cool
- Bugscope Teamyou can thank chas, he has the artistic eye
- Teacherhow did th walking stick heads turn out
- Bugscope Teamthe head we put on was too juicy...
- Bugscope TeamI believe we had to take the one off the sample because it was too juicy and would have kept us from pumping down in time for the session
- 2:27 pm
- Bugscope TeamYou're off the stage there. We're seeing the rest of hte inside of the microscope. You can go back to the lower left to find the sample
- Bugscope Teamchoose a preset if you get lost, looks like you might have run off the stage
- Bugscope TeamCool, back in action
- Teacherare we stuck
- Bugscope Teamyou should be good to go
- Bugscope TeamHaving a problem with something? Far as I know you should be fine
- Bugscope TeamOn to the eye preset now
- TeacherI hit the eye preset but do not see a change
- Bugscope Teamtry refreshing your screen
- Bugscope TeamHmm... I can see the eye preset. Try a refresh of the browser window
- Bugscope Teamnot sure what it is on a mac, F5, or just the refresh button.
- Teacherok
- Bugscope TeamNot F5 on a mac. Apple-R
- Bugscope TeamDid it work?
- Bugscope Teamah yeah, cool
- Bugscope TeamPossibly just temporarily
- Teacherwhich insect does this belong to
- Bugscope TeamI believe this is on the beetle
- Bugscope Teamthis the milkweed bug?
- 2:32 pm
- Bugscope Teamok
- Bugscope TeamOne of the ones that arrived alive, a "stowaway" I'm told
- Bugscope TeamIf you take the mag down we can tell better.
- Bugscope TeamIt looks like you might need to refresh again, are you missing all the old chat text below?
- Bugscope TeamProb'ly metamorphosed along the way.
- Bugscope Teamthis was the extra passenger
- Bugscope Teamsometimes we get mealworms that turn into adults on the trip here
- Bugscope TeamMarie/Andrew, can you see the new chat coming up? You're showing up as "idle" from our side which makes me think you're not getting the new chat data
- Teacherwere here
- Bugscope Teamcan you read this and do you see the prothorax on the screen?
- 2:37 pm
- Bugscope Teambecause your name is grey in the who
- Bugscope Team's online section we are concerned...
- TeacherIs this a darkling beetle?
- Bugscope TeamCate is that what this is? I think so.
- Bugscope TeamCate made the stub.
- Bugscope TeamYes, I believe this is
- Bugscope TeamI could tell you if we zoomed out
- Bugscope Teamthere is a darkling beetle and another unknown beetle on this stub
- 2:42 pm
- Bugscope Teamnow Marie is on but still grey.
- Bugscope TeamNow she's red and starred...
- Bugscope Teamso we're güd
- Teacheryes
- Bugscope TeamOOF
- Teacheroof?
- Bugscope Teamout of focus
- Bugscope Teamout of focus :)
- Bugscope TeamI typed that when we were up close
- Teachersem im tlk
- Bugscope Teamyeah I guess so
- Bugscope Teamdo you have a bunch of teachers coming in today?
- Teacherbck in 2 got to get class on cmptr
- Bugscope Teamgot it
- Bugscope Teamwe're getting txt-speaked
- 2:50 pm
- Teacherok teachers are logging on
- Bugscope TeamGreat! Hi laura
- Studenthi
- Bugscope Teamhello teachers, welcome to bugscope 2.0!
- Bugscope Teamhello!
- Studenti'm here
- Bugscope Teamgreat! welcome!]
- Bugscope Teamcan't tyyype
- Bugscope Teamkevin and patti hello!
- Bugscope TeamOh wow everyone is here.
- Bugscope TeamThis is the head of a beetle
- Studenthello
- Studentfrom underneath?
Bugscope TeamYes. We like to mount the bugs on their backs almost all the time because the underside is typically more interesting to look at
- Bugscope Teamyou can see the antennae, and the eyes tuncked in beneath
- Studentthis looks like a bug
- Bugscope TeamFYI: One user at a time gets control, but on request from Marie/Andrew we can grant control to anyone so you can all take a turn from your spots, e.g.
- Bugscope Teamyes we usu mount them upside down
- Bugscope Teamthere's more to see on the ventral side
- Bugscope Teamlike the legs, and what we see here
- 2:55 pm
- Bugscope Teamso Andrew has control of the 'scope now...
- Bugscope TeamAnd he should be able to drive.
- Bugscope TeamWe can confer control to anyone who wants it, but as Chas says one at a time
- Bugscope Teambe sure and let us know when you have questions
- Bugscope Teamabout insects or the electron microscope or about Mrs Wallace...
- Bugscope Teamright
- Bugscope Teamactually I just wanted to see if she was listening...
- Bugscope Teamyou can focus here
- Bugscope Teamoof as scott likes to say
- Studentlooks like a honeycomb
- Bugscope Teama lot of compound eyes do look like honeycombs
- Bugscope TeamThis is a compound eye; you can see the ommatidia but need to focus better.
- Bugscope Teamit's like the most efficient packing for 'spheres'
- 3:00 pm
- Studentlooks like a honey comb
- TeacherI'm trying to drive the scope
- StudentCan you zoom out?
- Bugscope TeamYikes, sorry guys. It should be OK now
- TeacherI can't seem to focus
- GuestDoes it have a single pupil or one for each section?
- Bugscope TeamWe hit a soft limit on the number of concurrent users and I had to bump it up. Sorry about that, our fault. People hsould hit refresh if they aren't seeing everything properly
- Bugscope Teamgetting better
- Bugscope Teamthey are like individual eyes
- Bugscope Teamnot sure you could say they have pupils but each one gets a full image
- Bugscope TeamOur brains form one coherent image from our two eyes, but imagine the complexity of putting together images from hundreds or thousands of eyes!
- Studentwhat is all those little bubbles
- Bugscope TeamThose are the individual "facets" or ommatidia of the compound eye of the beetle
- Bugscope Teamthe brain is often very heavily weighted, in flying insects, to optical processing
- Bugscope Teamto visual processing
- TeacherSome of our screen are out of focus
- Bugscope Team,mine is too, now
- Bugscope TeamYes, that's how the scope is. Use the focus tool and try one direction (+ or -). IF it gets worse, try the other one for a while
- Bugscope TeamThere, looking much better!
- GuestDo they deliver a single picture to the brain or muliple?
Bugscope TeamThe brain would have the integrate all the signals from the individual ommatidia, however nobody really knows exactly how they experience the resulting image
- Bugscope Teamhow about now?
- Bugscope TeamOK, try the other direction now since that's making it worse
- Bugscope TeamI think all of the images are processed into a single image.
- 3:05 pm
- Studentwhat is the job of the facets?
- Bugscope Teamsometimes it takes a second to update on the screens
- TeacherI'm going to move to a waalking stick leg
- Bugscope TeamThe leg here has a ton of "spines", different shapes and sizes of hairs called setae
- Bugscope TeamWhat's really cool is that the more complex hairs have intricate patterns, like the long striations here on this hair
- Bugscope Teamhaving all of those facets means the eye can have closer to 360 degree vision
- StudentDo these "spines" help the walking stick stay on surfaces?
Bugscope TeamYou can imagine how it might help it when crawling through a small space, with those backwards facing spines. However, most of the walking is done with claws at the end of the foot or sticky pads called pulvilli
- Bugscope Teamthe spines are mechanosensory, we think
- Bugscope Teamthey are attached to nerves beneath the exoskelton
- Bugscope Teamexoskeleton
- Bugscope Teambecause there is an exoskeleton, the insect needs to have lots of sensory setae to stay in touch with its environment.
- Bugscope Teamsome of the setae are chemosensory
- Bugscope TeamThe spines/hairs may also play a role in heat dissipation for some insects, e.g. bees
- Bugscope TeamBy increasing the surface area tremendously
- Bugscope Teamand some of the microsetae probably do not have a sensory function -- they add surface area and/or create a recognizable pattern.
- 3:10 pm
- StudentOur group did an experiment on stick bugs. The stick bug did not stick to paper when hanging past a 90 degree angle. Why do you think that is?
Bugscope TeamIf we could move to the end of the leg and see the "foot" that would help, but my rough guess is that the claw can grab onto paper fibers just enough for 90 deg, but past that gravity is pulling it away from the paper and it has no sticky pulvillus to continue holding it on
- Bugscope Teamspines such as theses are probably for protection from getting eaten
- Bugscope Teamstick bugs may not have tenent setae like flies do, for example
- Bugscope Teamsounds like a fun experiment
- Bugscope Teamthey probably do not have a pulvillus, or sticky pad.
- StudentIt was. However, the stick bug attached to other surfaces, but not paper.
Bugscope TeamWhat kind of surfaces. Things that are slicker like glass, or rougher like tree bark?
- StudentCan you clarify tenent?
- Bugscope Teamthe end is towards the left
- Bugscope Teamthe pulvillus would be on each tarsus; sometimes beetles have two on each
- Bugscope Teamtenent is Latin, like in the Spanish 'tener.'
- Bugscope TeamGeckos are a great example of an alternate and fascinating method of adhering to surfaces:
- Studentplastic, stainless steel, leaves, paper, water, running water
- Bugscope TeamSo it means to hold, in this case.
- TeacherWhich way do i go to see the end of a leg of the walking stick?
- Bugscope Teamto the left.
- Teacherok
- Bugscope TeamI guess I should say tenent is from the Latin
- Bugscope TeamThey have millions of micro-setae that are so small that they each feel a minute attraction to the surface called Van der Waal's force. Each force alone is tiny, but together they are enough to hang a baby by one gecko toe
- Bugscope TeamThe advantage of sticky chemicals like a typical pulvillus is that it never gets dirty, and can stick even to non-sticky things like Teflon!
- Bugscope Teamoops, "the advantage OVER sticky chemicals"
- 3:15 pm
- Bugscope TeamI'd suggest zooming out to a low mag then trying the drive function to find the end of the leg
- Bugscope Teamthe microsetae on a gecko foot are I think one tenth the diameter of those on a fly pulvillus
- Teachermy view is taking a while to cahnge
Bugscope TeamYour connection test showed your bandwidth was near the minimum needed, so it's possible having all the clients is backing things up a little bit
- Bugscope TeamThe explanation for Van der Waal's force I heard once relied heavily on Quantum Mechanics, something you typically don't think of as being directly relevant to small animals, insects, etc
- Bugscope TeamAndrew you should be able to lower the mag, for starters.
- Bugscope TeamI'm not getting updated images either.
- Teacherscott, can you give varina control of the scope
- Bugscope Teamgot it
- Bugscope TeamVarina's got control now!
- Bugscope Teammoving to the left...
- Bugscope TeamVarina, I'd suggest zooming out to the lowest mag. The speed of driving scales with mag, so you'll be going for a VERY long time at 600x
- Bugscope Teamit's a big leg...
- Bugscope TeamGreat, try to get to ~50x
- Bugscope Teamcool. good job.
- Bugscope TeamYeah, we're at the lowest now
- Bugscope Teamnow it should go quite quickly
- Bugscope Teammoving right along
- Bugscope Teamyou're seeing some other leg segments now
- Bugscope Teamlittle further...
- Bugscope Teamgood sign that it is getting more narrow
- Bugscope Teamthe tarsi
- 3:21 pm
- Teacherwhoever has control their computer seems to take awhile to catch up
Bugscope TeamThey should have the most recent images if all is going well since they're the only ones getting live video. I fear we might be using a fair amount of your bandwidth with so many viewers online at once
- Bugscope Teamnow, the tarsi
- Bugscope Teamgreat, we're right there
- Bugscope TeamThanks for letting us know, Andrew. We are always working on this.
- Bugscope Teamfor the past 8+ years
- Bugscope Teamnow we can zoom in and center in on the end there. you can see the other beetle hanging out below
- GuestWhat are tarsi?
- Bugscope Teamtarsi are the final segments, the most distal segments, on a limb.
- Bugscope Teamsingular tarsus
- Bugscope Teamwhen we say "segments" of a leg, we're referring to each part that's separated by joints. so a human leg would have 2 "segments". the insects though have many segments
- Bugscope Teamhard to tell. can we back off like two times?
- Bugscope Teamto see where we are?
- Bugscope Teamone more zoom out and I think I could tell you
- Bugscope TeamI thought we were on the claw
- StudentIt's moving out, it's just taking a little while...sorry!
- Bugscope TeamI was answering a question and missed seeing what it was as we zoomed in
- Bugscope TeamVarina you are doing a good job. It is hard to do this remotely.
- Bugscope TeamHmm, we're not seeing any movement here. Can you press it again?
- Bugscope TeamAs you are doing.
- Bugscope TeamAre you waiting for the hourglass cursor icon? Is that what you mean by it's takign a while?
- Bugscope TeamOh, I know what this is!
- Bugscope Teamthis looks like someone's abdominal segments
- 3:26 pm
- Bugscope TeamThis is the mealworm, we're seeing a few of the body segments
- Bugscope Teamis this a mealworm? looks like it
- Studentcan you give me control back
- Bugscope Teamwe need to find the end of the leg again -- we were so close
- Bugscope Teamshould be
- Bugscope Teamgot it
- Bugscope Teameither larva or pupa
- Bugscope Teamlarva
- Bugscope TeamBecause they have a rigid exoskeleton, they have their bodies in many short cylindrical sections connected by soft joints. Sort of like a knight's armor
- Bugscope Teamthis is the milkweed bug
- Bugscope Teamits the one to the right of the larva. and yes they both dont look pretty
- Bugscope Teamit has a long proboscis
- Bugscope TeamWent past the bug there...
- Bugscope TeamNow we're seeing bubbles in the carbon tape used to stick the bugs down
- Bugscope Teamthis is the doublestick carbon tab. a handful of sheets of these just cost us $640
- Bugscope Teamoutrageous
- Studenthelp which way do i go
- Bugscope TeamBack to the left to find the milkweed bug
- Bugscope Teamyou can see silver to the right
- Bugscope TeamOr you can jump to one of the eight presets in the list to the lower right
- Bugscope TeamAndrew wants to go to the end of the leg, right?
- Bugscope TeamThere are several nobody's explored yet
- 3:31 pm
- Bugscope Teamthe leg should be to the right nearby
- Bugscope TeamYeah, that'd be a nice future feature
- Bugscope Teamup or down?
- StudentIs he sticking his proboscis out or does the proboscis stay out this far all the time?
Bugscope TeamI believe this proboscis is fairly rigid so he folds it down along the bottom side of his body when it's not in use. Some get rolled up, like in moths or butterflies
- Bugscope Teamdoesn't it run right down the middle of the stub?
- Bugscope Teamjust head right, its right next to this guy
- Bugscope Teamthe leg is at an angle
- Bugscope Teamhe is holding his proboscis against his abdomen, or almost against it.
- StudentIt runs past his first set of legs. About how long is the proboscis? - literally.
- Bugscope Teamnormally when he is feeding it would be sticking out
- Bugscope Teamwe can see 3 mm of it now
- StudentI know it comes out when he is eating, but in this picture is it in resting position or extended position?
- Bugscope TeamIt is resting
- Bugscope Teamresting I believe. I think they flip it up to pierce it down inside of the plant stem/leaf when feeding
- StudentWow! It's long even when not extended.
Bugscope TeamYeah, I'm not sure that it ever retracts much in length, I think they just fold it under them to keep it out of the way when not in use
- Bugscope Teamoften what we see is a sheath and there is a piercing portion inside
- Bugscope Teamlike on a mosquito
- Bugscope Teamor a bedbug
- Bugscope Teamthere's a lancet inside
- StudentUgh! Oops, Andrew wants me to say, "Oh, how interesting!"
- StudentWhat am I looking at?
- Bugscope TeamYes, sometimes you'll see a protective sheath that splits down the middle and folds out to the sides, revleaing the lancet inside
- Bugscope Teame.g. on mosquitoes
- 3:36 pm
- StudentAre those hairs?
Bugscope Teambut essentially yes... hairs are always called "setae" on insects, and they typically have a more diverse set of functions than our hairs do
- Bugscope Teamon a mosquito the lancet is serrated at the end, like a doublebladed steak knife.
- Bugscope Teamthose are sensory setae, mostly
- Bugscope Teamwe're not supposed to call them hairs, even though we do all the time
- StudentOkay. Thank you!
- Bugscope Team'cause they're not on mammals
- Bugscope Teambrb
- Bugscope Teaminsects have a lot of 'hairs' because they have exoskeletons, so they use them as a type of 'nerve ending' a lot of the time
- 3:41 pm
- StudentSo they feel through their "hairs?"
Bugscope TeamYep. We have nerve endings embedded just below our skin that obviously can register the pressure put on our skin. If your skin was hard though, like their exoskeletons are, you'd have trouble, thus the need for the hairs to transmit the touch information through the cuticle to the nerves inside
- Bugscope TeamLet's go to the stick bug leg again and see if we can get to the claw portion
- Bugscope Teamyes they feel and taste sometimes, through their hairs
- StudentAs we "feel" through our fingers
- StudentOkay!
- Bugscope Teamit's the eating machine -- the wood eating machine
- StudentIs that a claw?
Bugscope TeamThis is actually the head of the termine. You can see a serrated pattern there which is the mandibles, or main jaw
- StudentI need to logout it seems that my computer has stalled
- StudentSorry! I can't visualize this stuff!
- Studentwould be able to see this better i color
Bugscope TeamBecause we're bouncing electrons off of the sample instead of light (photons), the image is formed very differently. With electrons there is no wavelength information (from which we distinguish colors) to detect, this no color. The electron image is also VERY topographical because everything is opaque, even water is not see-through
- Bugscope Teamthe setae go through the chitin and connect to nerves on the inside of the body cavity
- Teacherok I'm mb now and need control of the scope again
- Bugscope Teamwe are using electrons to image and thus do not see color
- Studentwould we be able to see this more clearly in color
- Studentwhere is the eye?
- StudentDo termites have eyes? If so, where are they?
Bugscope TeamMost of the workers don't have eyes. The few who in the "reproductive caste" typically do, and sometimes the soldiers do too
- Bugscope Teamthe wavelengths of the electrons are so much smaller than the wavelengths of visible light
- Bugscope Teami dont think they have eyes
- Teacherhey scott can you give me control of the scope
- Bugscope TeamI thought they were blind -- they don't like light and I think usu are not pigmented
- Bugscope Team"thus no color"
- Bugscope Teamk you have control
- Teacherthank you!
- Bugscope TeamCate did it.
- StudentAre you all grad students or professors?
- StudentWhen we were looking at termites, there was a small dark area at the tip of the mouth. Is that the mandible?
- StudentWe're teachers!
- StudentElementary school teachers in California!
- 3:46 pm
- Bugscope TeamChas is a grad student. Cate and I are graduates, I guess.
- Bugscope Teamsomeone needs to click again to have it stop driving.
- Bugscope TeamI have been doing this since I got out of college, or I guess just before I got out of college
- Bugscope Teamor hit "done". there we go
- Bugscope Teamnow you can go back to the preset
- Bugscope Teamsometimes worker termites have compound eyes, but the only really developed eyes belong to the reproductive termites
- Bugscope TeamSomething I believe I remember hearing about ants, but probably is the same for termites, is that all the members of the colony have the same DNA
- Bugscope TeamAnd Cate is the same; she started as an undergraduate. Chas started doing this in high school, as a sophomore.
- Bugscope TeamHowever they can look very different, the reproducing ones are large, may have eyes, etc, the soldiers are huge, and the workers are tiny. But they all have exactly the same DNA, so their differences are all due to environmental factors that affect the way they transcribe their DNA
- StudentHow come there aren't "hairs" on the pointed edges of the claw but there are on the rest of the leg?
Bugscope TeamWonderful question, but I can't think any any good answers, sorry. Our entomologist who'd know is on a collection trip in CA
- Bugscope Teamsetae on the claw would get rubbed off, probably.
- TeacherIs this claw located on the ends of the legs?
Bugscope TeamYep, beetles typically have the two claws about about a 9-120 degree angle like that
- Bugscope Teamyes on the end of the leg, each leg
- Bugscope Teamon each leg
- Bugscope TeamSome have a pulvillus, or pad (typically made of many sticky setae) right below the claws there
- Bugscope Teamto help them cling to certain surfaces
- Bugscope Teamif you see color in an electron micrograph it is false color
- 3:52 pm
- Bugscope Teamwhat we want to see is to the south a tiny bit
- Bugscope Teamthe sample moved since we made the preset
- Bugscope Teamlooks like maybe this preset drifted a little. I believe we were looking just below it. You could use click to center to go down a short bit
- Bugscope Team it's alive
- Teachershould we decrease mag
- Bugscope Teamthat worked
- Bugscope TeamSometimes the presets drift over time as the insect dries out in the vacuum and shrivels more or charges up with electrons and flexes
- Bugscope Teamyou can do click to center
- Bugscope TeamYou don't have to move far. If you hit done, and use click to center now you could center on the same spot as we originally set in the preset
- Bugscope Teamnow you can see, on the image, the shape of where the electrons have been
- Bugscope Teamthe square pattern is where the electron beam contaminated the sample
- Teacherwhich part is a bacteria - the long piece
- Bugscope Teammight be, but it was more obvious near the bottom there if we could click to center and zoom in
- Bugscope Teamif you can move down slightly and magnify
- Bugscope Teamthey look like the Advil Liquigels
- 3:57 pm
- TeacherWhat is apalp
- Bugscope TeamWhoops, looks like things got out of control there. I highly suggest using the Click to CENTER instead of dlick to drive
- Bugscope TeamOuw, lots more bacteria here
- Bugscope Teamclick to drive will take you to the edge of the world if you don't click again to stop
- Bugscope TeamThe mouth palps are like little "hands" that they use to maneuver food around or clean other mouthparts
- Bugscope TeamThis one seems to have a lot of sensory setae in it, perhaps for tasting food
- Bugscope Teamand it is hard to do that -- if you click twice you are driving again
- Teacherthere is a delay it looks like in the controls
- Bugscope Teambacteria are usually, the bacilli, about 2 microns long
- Bugscope Teamwe saw some on the way here
- Studentwhose palpa are they?
- Bugscope Team2 microns is about 30 times smaller than the width of human hair
- Bugscope Teamthis is on a beetle I believe
- Bugscope TeamPreset 5 is kind of interesting to me, because it looks a lot like a fingerprint. We found it on the inside edge of one of those big curved claws
- Bugscope Teamso this is an accessory mouthpart that has chemosensory setae in it
- TeacherWe are almost at the end of our session
- Teacherwhat pictures will be available from this session
- Bugscope Teamwe seem to have lost like 30 people
- Bugscope TeamYes, a full transcript complete with images is available, I'll get you the link here:
- Bugscope Teamall of the images will be available
- Teacherthey are lookin at the homepage to see how use bugscope at their school sites
- Bugscope Teamhey cool
- Bugscope TeamWonderful!
- Teachercan i still look at the end of the walking stick leg?
- TeacherI was not able to drive the scope to it
- Bugscope TeamYou can click on the thumbnails there to get the full image size
- Bugscope Teamyeah go ahead now
- Bugscope TeamI can try driving there, one moment
- Bugscope Teamor you can, I'll let you try first
- 4:02 pm
- Bugscope Teamnow take the mag down, and then drive to the west
- Bugscope TeamOk, now try driving to the left left
- Teacherwith less people on it seems faster
- Bugscope Teamyeah we had a large group
- Bugscope Teampushing the software and the bandwidth
- Teacherit is taking awhile to refresh maybe you should just drive us there
- Bugscope Teamyeah, like I said, we clocked your bandwidth at ~135Kb/s which is about the bare minimum needed for the live video feed
- Bugscope TeamSo we see tow claws and we see something in between that I would like to know about
- Bugscope Teamtwo
- Bugscope Teamclaws
- Bugscope TeamSo there are the claws. Looks like there's some sort of pad below it, but it doesn't appear to have lots of setae like a pulvillus
- Teacheris this the end of the leg of the walking stick now
- Bugscope Teamyeah it is a big pad, but it doesn't have setae on it
- Teacherare you guys in the same place
- Bugscope Teamyes
- Bugscope Teamwe're in a few different offices all around the building
- Bugscope Teamyou mean on the screen?
- Bugscope TeamChas is at the 'scope.
- Teacherare you physcially in the same place or different location s in the building?
- 4:07 pm
- Bugscope Teamacross several different floors actually
- Bugscope TeamI am in my office like 15 feet from the 'scope, and Cate is in her office adjacent ot the 'scope room
- Bugscope Teamsometimes our entomologist logs on from her apartment
- Bugscope Team she is collecting in CA now
- TeacherThank you so much this was an awsome opportunity for the teachers
- Bugscope Teamthank you
- Teacherwe will be logging out now
- TeacherYou guys and gals rock!
- Bugscope TeamGlad to have you on, sorry few a few hiccups along the way
- Bugscope TeamThanks!
- Bugscope TeamLet us know if you have any post-session questions about the transcript, data, etc
- Teacherwhere do i fill out the feedback form?
- Bugscope Teamone sec:
- Bugscope Teamhttp://bugscope.itg.uiuc.edu/apply/blank_form.htm
- Teacherok i got it. Thanks so much again and I'm logging off bye!
- Bugscope Teamcya
- 4:14 pm
- Bugscope Teamthank you!