 Online learning has enabled students to continue their studies during the pandemic. Simple Cloud is a true virtual classroom that has made this process simple for both students and teachers. We went to visit Rosebroughford College to find out how it works. If life is a game, here's where it gets virtual. An ancient battle is brought brightly into the 21st century by students at the internationally renowned Rosebroughford University in Kent. Every twist and turn of this feud is captured and brought to life on screen. The students now animated creatures from the past. These black outfits with multi-coloured baubles are motion capture suits that enable students to express their creativity in 3D. This is the future of the virtual arts. Whether it's animation or gaming, the system bringing it all to the screen is called Simple Cloud, a global cloud-based system with realistic graphic capacity. Chief Executive Olivier Wolff says the system was created to enable collaboration. Simple Cloud creates virtualised workspace environment, leveraging the power of IBM Cloud, NVIDIA, GPUs, VMware technologies as well as unique technologies for collaboration and generation of dynamic virtual workstations. We can create an environment in 30 minutes and connect people in less than 60 seconds so that they could collaborate as if they were together in the same environment. Directing the action for students is James Simpson, who's the head of the Centre for Digital Production at Rosebroughford University. He says this is the kind of virtual experience that could be available to all of us. What we're trying to do at Rosebroughford is provide training for potentially the next generation of theatre professionals who would be working in a virtual theatre sector. This is an emerging sector, it's something that doesn't exist until a few years ago at least, and it allows us to produce theatre and live performance in an entirely virtual and digital world. And this isn't just filming theatre and putting it in a cinema, this is something you can experience in a VR headset or wearing glasses or something you watch on an internet browser like a computer game or inside a computer game itself, and our students have been trained to be able to create the content for that experience. So we hope that they will end up working in game studios or film studios but particularly working for theatres, making the next generation of virtual theatre. And really we're at this crossroads where gaming and film and theatre all collide. It's the first of those industries that have really come together in the way they have. Here at this university, students from around the world are using SimpleCloud to stay connected and learn virtually, but it can be used to bring things to life too. In this design lab, students are using the system to create art collaboratively with the most demanding software. SimpleCloud is very, very good because all the softwares are in there. Instead of opening up different softwares, you just go in one window and see everything in there. It just connects from my laptop, then that's it. Just if I can connect it and we can use anything just like we are at college. And according to Chief Executive Olivier Wolff, it's the simplicity of the system that makes it life-changing. For me, when I discovered it, it was like it's what I've always wanted for the people I was working with. I mean, it's freeing the talent, the people, the students to use whatever software they want in real time. People can collaborate, for instance in VFX, between London and Toronto and Quebec in order to create fantastic end-of-course projects on Unreal Engine, on Unity, all together as if they were physically together. For students at this university working together on theatre games and the visual arts, they say the software makes learning more accessible. It's also changing the way they create, live and learn together from anywhere, bringing the world to their campus.