On Thursday 08 August 2002 12:07, Michael Hofer wrote: > Hello! > > Am Donnerstag, 8. August 2002 09:47 schrieb Uwe Thiem: > > > > Well, so far, it's just a proof of concept. Necessary improvements for a > > 1.0 version are: > > Features: > [...] > Sounds good - I like your plans and ideas... (would also fit nicely into a > common math-trainer ;-) > > > The whole UI poses an interesting question: Usually, kids can not read yet > > when they start learning timestables - or at least, they aren't good at it > > yet. How to design an UI for someone who cannot read? > > That's a good point - but difficult to answer.... :-) > I'll add it to my collection of possible points for the kde-edu-guidelines . > > > > Did you read my plans for a mathematic-training/competition-app I posted > > > on kde-edu? What do you think about joining efforts to develop such a > > > package? > > > > Nope, I haven't read kde-edu in months. Can you provide me with a link for > > the archive? Or, at least, send me the subject so I can search for it? > > http://lists.kde.org/?l=kde-edu&m=102846457323602&w=2 > http://lists.kde.org/?l=kde-edu&m=102848058432575&w=2 > http://lists.kde.org/?t=102848162600001&r=1&w=2 (start from the bottom) > http://lists.kde.org/?t=102854330400002&r=1&w=2 I see. As you've said in your first posting, Ktimes and ktt are for young kids who are just starting to learn timestables. Uwe -- Nothing is fool-proof given a sufficiently skilled fool. _______________________________________________ kde-edu mailing list kde-edu@mail.kde.org http://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-edu