WEBVTT 00:00.000 --> 00:11.000 What I know, I know. Well, thank you all for coming. Look at you. Wonderful people. 00:11.000 --> 00:16.000 Now I see you too. Fantastic. So we're going to talk about Lebo's technology in the browser. 00:16.000 --> 00:20.000 Probably you've seen it before. It looks like this. Well, then it's now blue and green. 00:20.000 --> 00:28.000 Depending on your spreadsheet or I know radical changes everywhere. But either way, you can collaboratively edit your open document files and so on. 00:28.000 --> 00:35.000 Obviously, in the browser, which hopefully you've tried and on your mobile phone, which is even better. 00:35.000 --> 00:40.000 And even in two modes, one where you can run offline, with can add online effect to be running on the mobile phone. 00:40.000 --> 00:44.000 Thanks to Scarlet here. You know, I look at that, maintaining it beautifully. 00:44.000 --> 00:50.000 And, or for Nicolas, actually, there's a good combination here. You know, helping happiness funding some of this work back in the day. 00:50.000 --> 01:01.000 But all you can run it as a web view. So you can collaboratively edit that online, without the people. But it looks just the same. 01:01.000 --> 01:06.000 I think it's complaining. I think there's a fan failure. That's right. If a fan problem, what can you do? 01:06.000 --> 01:12.000 So anyway, so it's lots and lots of good things there. And a whole lot of recent features. I just talked about automatic documents. 01:12.000 --> 01:18.000 You notice that. Maybe a few minutes ago, which is great. And everyone just talked about auto-text. So I went and talked much about that. 01:18.000 --> 01:26.000 But I think it's really cool. The little of those hospital administrators instead of writing, you know, don't do that. 01:26.000 --> 01:34.000 You know, when I pick myself in the eye, it hurts. You know, what should I do? And there's a very nice paragraph. You know, you say don't. And you press F3. And it says, 01:34.000 --> 01:42.000 thank you for your report of, you know, complaints and whatever, please consider not taking yourself in the eye and, you know, so in a friendly way. 01:42.000 --> 01:50.000 And so we can then update these and deploy them very useful in government for turning a small signal into a large noise, which is good. 01:50.000 --> 01:59.000 And lots of lots of other lovely things are going on there with auto-text and use a dictionary so that, you know, you can get all of those annoying red underlines. 01:59.000 --> 02:09.000 This used to be the majority of our rendering time was drawing these random lines, likely we've optimized it, but even better to use the dictionary to make sure you don't get them for the common words. 02:10.000 --> 02:19.000 I'm talking about commenting. I'm a big fan of this at commenting thing here, so you can, you know, mention someone's name and then, you know, they can actually comment back, which is good. 02:19.000 --> 02:26.000 It's, you know, it's shame chatting on your own. Actually, some of our staff show that most people can operate on their own, which is interesting. 02:26.000 --> 02:35.000 I, I then actually have the graph for that, but it's a, it's a very, very common use case. I'm most common use case is nobody using the software, which sounds bad. It sounds like we're not doing something good, doesn't it? 02:35.000 --> 02:42.000 But, but actually, nobody is often from nailing a file for someone else, so, so that's a good thing. You can get nice thumbnails. 02:42.000 --> 02:51.000 But anyway, so yes, this then will integrate with your integration, say next cloud, there will then send you an email or something saying, hey, you should check this document out. 02:51.000 --> 03:01.000 Awesome, you know, come on, come and give a comment. And pretty comments, why did one, so you can really write most of your document in the comments and the band and the, you know, the main bit there. 03:01.000 --> 03:10.000 And then perhaps you can print it out with the comment printing stuff from Quailant. So, one of the really cool things is that the OSI, thank you, OSI. 03:10.000 --> 03:26.000 Funded some, some beautiful things to allow commenting on complex documents. They have a lot of text, they need commenting on, and so you can then have a comment only commission for doc, ODT file, and you can even delete your own comments. 03:26.000 --> 03:37.000 But better than that, you can see some of this comment threading stuff there. Maybe some of these are nested replies here that you can, you can see, so more of a conversational, more powerful commenting functionality. 03:38.000 --> 04:05.000 And also, embedding this then into WordPress, so that, you know, you cannot load a document to your website and in some place very easily, you don't need, you know, to be a rocket scientist or something, you know, you can just attach this, click edit, then go inside your WordPress installation, then you can be collaboratively editing, commenting on documents, getting feedback from people and all of that, all of that, good stuff. And it's even easy, you just install the plugin and think that it's all happening. 04:05.000 --> 04:19.000 More from the map, we have some droop for integration, so if you like droopal, another, you know, wonderful content management system. You there, figure has added this beautiful functionality to view and edit and collaborate around that. 04:19.000 --> 04:34.000 And we agree thanks to the open social team and did it, the director general of a digitization inside European Commission. So some great stuff going on there to add, you know, open source, open standards, collaborative commenting. 04:34.000 --> 04:49.000 Even more fun, another third thing is XWiki. So there's a great desire for collaboration around documents and there's a great misunderstanding of what what products are for, obviously the XWiki is a great way of collaborating in, in Wikits, you know, and it's, it's a cool tool. 04:49.000 --> 05:00.000 But often people want to just take their existing document, dump it somewhere and then collaborate and say, well, anyway, we can do that beautifully, inside XWiki as well. So yeah, on the attachments. 05:01.000 --> 05:29.000 And then as you experience, obviously, we want to optimize our user experience for real users. So what's a real users do? Well, that is a very interesting question and a high code, what are he is somewhere, yeah, user experience is particularly fascinating by what people are doing. Now, of course, if you're a large American multinational, you can send all the data back to base, you know, and that's great. And then you can spy on the whole world once, maybe there's a cockpit somewhere with all of the data coming in of what everyone's doing. 05:29.000 --> 05:40.000 We don't do the telemetry bit. We just log it to a file on your system and we anonymise all of the content. So it's, you know, it's a series of commands you did, but not the text you typed in, not the images you pasted in the song. 05:40.000 --> 05:50.000 And so we can then get all of these sort of commands, so you're a bit of text input, some pasteings and there's actually just deletes either pulling one way or back spacing the other way. 05:50.000 --> 05:59.000 And then, you know, filtering about in your document. And then we can see over a few days what was, what was going on under counts, how many users were editing documents? 05:59.000 --> 06:09.000 I mentioned that earlier, actually, it's a really interesting graph. So what you discover is zero is the norm from mailing, followed by one person, you know, and actually it's really useful to know where the document is. 06:09.000 --> 06:17.000 So instead of having in 10 different emails and whatever, it is at one place in your, you know, in your browser and that's where you go and edit it. 06:17.000 --> 06:27.000 One, two, three, whatever, it fills down and there's a big spike about 30, which is children in classrooms. So, you know, we're not to mice for the zero case, the one case, the two case and the 30 case. 06:27.000 --> 06:40.000 So hopefully there's some commonality there. Good news, it works for all of them. And we're also tracking, taking rates. So it's nice to know how fast people can actually type when they claim to type very fast, but actually, in reality it's quite slow. 06:40.000 --> 06:49.000 So unless they're meshing the keyboard here to test, as it were, you can get very high rate with that, as we discussed before about 10 times faster than average. 06:49.000 --> 06:56.000 So it's some really interesting metrics there, thanks to Tilla for doing that, and I think Elliot, we had an intern doing some crunching. 06:56.000 --> 07:01.000 I'm stiles, so lots of people love styles and say they should, but Kevin Romain has been weak until recently. 07:01.000 --> 07:07.000 And now we've added this beautiful style list, and so you can see all your paragraphs and character and all the different wonderful styles. 07:07.000 --> 07:11.000 If you've never seen the style spotlight feature, you should. There's a pretty button. You can check here. 07:11.000 --> 07:14.000 Like that. And then suddenly, you like the visual effect. 07:14.000 --> 07:23.000 And there you go. And then we'll show you in the document where all the styles are. So you can look at this eight and go, ah, this is style in that list. 07:23.000 --> 07:29.000 And work out why it doesn't look like you like and simplify it and make it more and more beautiful, which is great. 07:30.000 --> 07:33.000 Most recent collaboration line has a whole lot of work on presentations. 07:33.000 --> 07:39.000 I think we just had a little bit to talk about earlier, but a whole lot of features presenting in Windows for the people with big screens sitting at home. 07:39.000 --> 07:42.000 I'm isolated wanting to see more on their screen. 07:42.000 --> 07:47.000 A beautiful presented console when showing your speaker notes and what's next and what's going on. 07:47.000 --> 07:55.000 I'm presenting in Windows there, you know, for a useful three transitions. I think we just saw WebGL goodness, making everything pretty. 07:55.000 --> 08:00.000 And, you know, you've blingy and gorgeous in all sorts of ways. 08:00.000 --> 08:06.000 I suppose if you like that sort of thing. And hopefully, hopefully that's all extremely useful for selling something. 08:06.000 --> 08:10.000 So what else? Oh, yes. 08:10.000 --> 08:18.000 Making everything a line nicely snapped a line, so better alignment bars and so on and making presentations easier to make them look pretty. 08:18.000 --> 08:22.000 I'm custom object interactions. So, you know, you can put little widgets in here. 08:22.000 --> 08:29.000 You can make a wiki inside a presentation that turns out. If you really try hard, you know, maybe we should do a wiki to a presentation export. 08:29.000 --> 08:32.000 Anyway, so you can have all of this, you know, think you click on it and it goes to the next page. 08:32.000 --> 08:37.000 Hyperlinks made with completely complicated objects. Anyway, people like this for some reason. 08:37.000 --> 08:44.000 And I guess in the training session it's nice to have like one presentation and then you can have a, it's like there's stories, you know, go roll the dice and go to page seven or something. 08:44.000 --> 08:48.000 If it's, if it's that, you know, you can read your own presentation in different ways. 08:48.000 --> 08:54.000 So, some cool things there. Lots of optimizations. I think Quay won't talk about some of those. 08:54.000 --> 09:09.000 As security wise, we've helped our challenge administrators who are overly harassed and busy and, you know, they, they, they, they can see now the list of things that may or may not be right with their server and get it right more quickly with links to the SDK. 09:09.000 --> 09:17.000 We've used privileges or reduced need for privileges in our containers, so we contain each document and its own container. 09:17.000 --> 09:22.000 And we need, we have needed special privileges to do that previously, sort of capsis admin. 09:22.000 --> 09:28.000 And now using Linux namespaces, which in theory makes everything great, except everyone then disables it again with Apple. 09:28.000 --> 09:34.000 And, you know, as soon as you add a nice feature that helps us make people secure, it's immediately disabled as a security risk. 09:34.000 --> 09:36.000 So there you go. What can you do? 09:36.000 --> 09:43.000 And, you know, lots of improvements in interoperability, PDF 2.0 is just coming out, lots of nice new things there. 09:43.000 --> 09:51.000 New font embedding, so Google's been doing a great job of making interoperable fonts, which are, metricly the same, or they're visually different. 09:51.000 --> 09:59.000 And lots of other nice things, some, I'll attribute, you know, excellent cups and match things, all sorts of stuff, a shipping there with new functions. 09:59.000 --> 10:07.000 There are loads of cool kids doing this, so thank you so much for all of the volunteers, jumping in and doing great things, particularly our translators. 10:07.000 --> 10:09.000 And I think that is my time. 10:09.000 --> 10:12.000 So thank you. Please do get involved. 10:12.000 --> 10:13.000 And listen. 10:13.000 --> 10:18.000 Thank you.