 Hi there everybody. Good afternoon or good morning, depending where you are. Welcome to the Quercos July workshop. Today we're going to be looking exclusively at Quercos web, which is our new tool for qualitative analysis that allows you to work straight in the browser. So previously for Quercos and a lot of other software you had to download and install software and that's not the case now. So Quercos web allows you pretty much all the functionality that you have in the desktop app, but straighten your browser without having to install anything. So that makes it a lot easier to get going with it, to work on your data wherever you are. It also allows you to work on phones and tablets and there's dedicated views for those as well. But it also kind of means that there are a lot more devices including Chrome OS devices that you can use Quercos on now. It makes it a great tool for collaboration as well because it's so easy for lots of people to get dug in and project together and there's no kind of issues with compatibility. So it doesn't matter whether actually people are using the desktop client or the web client you can still kind of collaborate and work together. So I'm going to give you a bit of a tour and a kind of step-by-step guide of using Quercos web, some of the features that we recently added and some of the things that are still to come and how it can kind of help kind of get out the way is the idea and then help you kind of focus on your qualitative research data. So if you go to the Quercos website all we have to do is hit here for the the web app and then this lets you get going. So you need a Quercos login. If you don't have one already you can sign up here. The sign up gives you 14 days free trial. There's no restrictions on the the trial so you can still do all the collaboration and limited collaboration and limited projects. It only works for 14 days that's all and you can cancel in the account page at any time if it's not for you or if you want to come back to it later. So the data is stored for a year so you can start and stop your subscription as you need it and then once you've registered your account you'll be able to log into Quercos which is what I'm going to do now. When you log into Quercos it's quite similar if you use the desktop version as well. You've basically got this list here of all the different projects that you've been working on previously. In my account there's quite a lot going back quite a large number of years so I can search through those as well if I'm looking for a particular project. I've also got the list here of projects that were shared with me so these are projects actually that other people have been working with and that means that they can share a project and we can work on it together and live. So my projects I can share with other people too. There's an example project here just click on the share button it says invite new people and then you can choose to give them just read-only access so they can just look at the project or read-write which allows them to kind of edit, create things, import documents, create codes and do coding and everything basically and you just need the email address of someone else who's registered to Quercos and then you'll be able to do that. There's also buttons here to download the project file, download it as JSON data if you want to export it and bring in someone else and to delete the project from Quercos cloud as well. You've also going to import projects here so if you've got an offline project already that someone sent you or we've been working on previously you can import the project which is stored on your computer as well. Again there's full compatibility between the offline version, the cloud version, desktop working on the web so anyone can work with anyone else that's using Quercos so that's the idea. You also kind of log out here there's also options for help and basically everything you need to kind of get going is here. Of course the big button here is for the new project and that's what we're going to do today and go through step by step so just click here on the new project button. We need to give it a project name so we'll give this one webinar example project and then you've got the option here to password protect the projects that's fairly straightforward you just need to put in your password twice. Couple of notes so we don't have any access to your data we cannot reset a password. When you use the password the project then becomes the project in the day the stage in the project then becomes end-to-end and encrypted at rest and what that means is nobody can intercept it without the password to decrypt it and nobody including us can access it even on the server so it's to give the maximum level of security and confidence in the data and we can talk more about the kind of privacy and data security measures that we've taken later but basically the password protected projects are a great place to start but there's no backdoor for anyone and that includes us as well so click on the create button we'll create a new project and we're ready to go so we've got the title of the project up here the main difference probably if you've used the Quercos desktop client before is most than menu options now in a kind of standard web app kind of interview interface on the left so we can go back to our project list here we can generate reports we can import the sources we're doing a minute we can save ours to save it as other different types of projects and there's help and different settings as well and then the other buttons are pretty similar to the ones in Quercos web and the basic layout and functionality works in the same way in this example what we're going to do is we're going to bring in some sources of data first and these actually come from one of the example data projects that we have so if you go to www.quercos.com forward slash workshops you'll see we've got a variety of open source qualitative data projects real and fabricated ones this is a real one it's one of the new ones we've not talked about too much yet but we're going to be making a big deal of later in the year we've done a project which is aimed to kind of help people teach and learn different qualitative analysis techniques even before they've kind of got their own data set and there's actually a series of interviews with professors of qualitative research talking about their research careers preferences for different types of qualitative analysis but also kind of how they came to their career their backgrounds their disciplines and things like that so it's kind of interesting it's quite interesting and easy to engage with but it makes for kind of fun practice and training data set there's also a coded project here which are qualitative research Kathy Gibbons it for us and that allows you to see a project that was coded and worked on you might want to interpret it in a different way but it's we'll look at it later actually it's kind of fun to see how an actual project looks when you've been doing some qualitative analysis so I'm going to import the sources of data and you can download them straight from here I've already done that so I just need to click on add sources here you could also put in blank sources if you want to write in them or copy and paste things but I'm just going to choose import these are my sources of interviews so these are just word files here I'll just click on the open button here at the moment Quercos web only supports the import of world file word files directly next month we're going to add all the kind of support that you would expect for lots of other different file formats so that is in the work but for now it's just doggies word files if you need to import other sources of data for the moment it's best just to do that in the desktop client but that's that's coming in the next couple of weeks anyway so I'm just going to click open here pop pop pop pop pop we've imported one two three four five six seven yeah so the seven interviews from this project and you can see so Quercos web now supports full HTML for rich text so you can have pictures in here you can have bold italics headings and a lot more ways to format and customize the text than you have before and you can edit these sources of text too so there's an edit button here and again this allows you kind of like full ability to kind of work with correct things in here it kind of pops to the right place if you want if you find it an issue that you want to fix and correct so you can do pretty much anything you want to within the sources of text and then you can just click tip to save at those changes when we're done and now great that's in bold so it looks a bit neater what I'm just going to do now for your benefit is actually just go to the settings here we'll have a quick look through them but I'm just going to make the text size a bit bigger just so it's a little bit easier to understand one of the things is it's a standard web page there so you can zoom in and out with your is it control zoom I think here yeah so that allows me to kind of make the whole screen bigger which I shall I'll make it a bit bigger for the purposes of the webinar but it's we can make the text bigger in the settings here as well so yeah we'll just put that up to the top so highlight counter if you want to count the number of highlights going on the quirks you can change the width of the highlight columns the memo columns we look at in a minute this kind of preview of how that looks here and then different things you might want to have generated in the report good so so now we've got our slightly larger text hopefully that's streaming a little bit easier anyway and now we've got yeah looks like everything is good so the tabs are now kind of along the side here which gives us a lot more space to play with actually and they're also scrollable there's also up here you can kind of this is really powerful I mean just to search for a particular name but you can also search here for any of the source properties we not put anyone here so if you quickly wanted to find a source you know from some a particular respondent who's in a particular location or of a particular age and then you can search through them in here as well so we can look at that again later but yeah lots of ways that we can kind of explore the data and load the different data sources here so what we do now is look at the source properties a little bit before we start coming up getting on with the coding because it's kind of quite a good discipline I think to kind of assign the attributes to the sources as you put the data in you don't have to do that but it kind of helps keep everything together so the source attributes of the ways the source properties of the ways that Quercos kind of keeps track of different things about your respondents or whatever data source you have so for example that might be age or location or gender it may also be if you're doing something like a systematic review data like the journal or the title or the year of publication and things that make it kind of more useful for you to kind of filter the data and find particular results from particular kind of subsets of your respondents later and we'll have a look at how that works so just going to click here on the settings cog at the top right that brings up the edit properties for that particular source we don't have any properties in the project so far and properties are kind of project-wide things so let's create a new one and we'll call this location and we'll add some new values while we're here so we'll have so these are the countries in this project so we've got respondents I think England and from Scotland Australia as well so we've created a new property and that's location and we've got three sorry so we've got location here and we're going to put in England Scotland good so now if we save that there we go we've actually got the property created now we can edit it later with that little cog button we can say that this person came from England and we can add as many of these properties as we like so we might have another one called discipline and that might be something like this person's health actually okay I miss about that so I can edit that here and change change that later is it going to auto correct me yes good my spelling is terrible I'm so sorry good so that's saved there and then click save great so our property sorry our source now the David health source now this has been assigned to have the properties that they're I think the room we said they were in England and their discipline was was health and we can do that for all the other properties here so Roger health as well so we've got to the properties here so all those previous values we put in are already there so it's quite easy to do that kind of data entry so from the location we can say that this person was from let's say Scotland I can't remember actually for this person and then the discipline they're also health so we'll choose health again then save good right so we're kind of telling the quirk us we're telling the project some of the kind of significant important things that we know about our respondents in some of the other software you might use folders and other ways to kind of group things together we find this kind of way of doing the properties is quite flexible and I'll show you kind of how we filter that and how we use that a little bit later on in the session but what we're going to do now is some analysis and some coding so we're actually going to start by creating some codes getting on and doing a bit of analysis now Quirk us tries to be as kind of approach agnostic as possible so it doesn't really matter if you're doing something like framework analysis grounded theory thematic analysis discourse analysis IPA in vivo coding line by line coding or any of the other kind of ways that you can approach the data it's just a tool to help you manage that data and kind of keep it together in ways that you can kind of use it to explore explore the data so what we're kind of going to do here is a kind of grounded theory thematic analysis kind of approach where we're just going to read through and we're going to look to see what themes we can we can create that kind of describe and start matching the data for us so let's talk about messy that okay so I'm going to start reading through through this have you always been a researcher in academia no I did one job at a time when my mother's what my mother terms a proper job I did a green master's degree sociology and they went for six years for the National Health Service as a general manager okay so what we can say is we can select this piece of text we can actually just drag and drop it onto the canvas here create a new theme which will call proper job actually that's just in higher so it's kind of like an in vivo code so we're using the participants own words to describe what's going on there's a space here to put in a longer description so we might describe what we mean by proper job because we can do smiley's we can do like a winky face there as well great yeah we've got a whole workshop coming up on emojis but there's a lot that we can do with them and silly stuff like that so now we've created this code called proper job this text is added to it so it's actually still selected so we can drag and drop and put this onto another code so we can say this is about studying because he's talking about his master's in education we don't need to put description in there that's pretty self-explanatory that one we can change the color here so the palette that randomly chooses from but there's like yeah like 16 million other colors that we can choose there if we want to try close that without saving it so I'll drag and drop this here studies just choose a purple for now then let's also say this is about NHS actually that's health so national health services and it's going to come up a bit more so I have purple again good great so now we've got one section of text and we've added it to three different codes that we created kind of on the fly and now when we kind of this highlight column here shows us color coded highlights for each of those sections of text so we can see kind of visually the connections between those colors and the codes and hovering your mouth over here we'll show you what that actually is now we've created these codes here we might create some more we can also sorry and right-click anywhere on the canvas where we want to create a new code or theme the cool quirks in Quercos and then we can say management so we'll just drag this here management career track good oh no it came up with the same color catastrophe so what we can do is we can right click on this code here choose edit and then I think we used yeah so far good good good we can keep to a nice pastel theme here so right clicking on any of the bubbles allows you to get to this edit view and then you can change the title which kind of happens pretty frequently really when you're re-evaluating what a code or theme kind of really means as you kind of add more data to it and work through more different sources and we'll see how these things kind of evolve as we go through and do more coding now what we might want to do is create another code let's create another one cool career no it's called employment that color we already have so what I want to do is just have one let's go a little bit further this is all about the NHS to set that to the NHS code so we just drag and drop text on here as well let's create a new one which will call good and then what we can do is drag and drop codes on here to create subcategories so now one of the employment options we have is the NHS and what we'll do is the University School of Public Health University also an employment option so we'll drag and drop that onto employment options here we might have actually about research that's kind of separate research job as a research career so we can drag and drop these here we can create categories we also create sub categories so it may actually be that research will pull that out maybe that's something which comes under University I'm not quite sure so it could be so we can drag that on to University as well and then it could be a sub sub category of that so we can have these kind of nested hierarchies of codes which allows us to kind of group things together keep things needed when we start to have lots and lots of codes and kind of connect things that might become a kind of broader theme later so these are kind of flexible and you can use them how you want but that's the kind of basic way to to do that code management and then so this is the basics of it so yeah we create codes either by right clicking here or dragging and drop some text onto the canvas and then we code things to them as we go along so that's the now it's the kind of the fun and the tedious part of it kind of going through doing all that coding interpretation creating codes that we think fit the data and then using the different colors and different ways to group it to kind of structure those together I mean I'm I'm always a big fan so in Quercos you can kind of you have this kind of spatial view here with the canvas and that means you can just drag and drop things around so this idea about what's a proper job and employment options you can kind of keep codes just together or have kind of like similar shades of colors to kind of help you navigate them all and kind of see what things are kind of coming together a little bit or kind of roughly group together it's always fun when I get to see she's not very often really but when I get to see other people's frameworks and canvases that they've created and how like oh yeah I know it's such a mess but then to them it makes a lot of sense they've got a whole bunch of things on a particular theme in one color they've got things in a particular area that are kind of coming together and it's just very easy and creative space to kind of think about those different codes and move them around so that's how we do most of this work what I'm going to do now is is what I usually do in these these webinar sessions is I cheat and I'm just going to open a project which is the project that Kathy coded on this dataset so we can just have a look and see how a kind of fully coded project might look some of the features there and then we'll look at some of the ways that we can use some of the views in Quercos to kind of categorize and look through those so we're just going to click to go to projects there's no save button so everything's constantly saved so even if the computer kind of dies halfway through this or you lose your internet connection you won't lose any data so you go to the project setting we'll open this project here the qualitative researcher journeys project so this is the one well yeah so this is the one that Kathy coded and again like yeah to her this makes sense to me it's yeah I'm getting used to it let's put it that way but so she's got one of the major themes because because she wrote this up for a conference so which was on research vulnerabilities and ESRC conference and then so so this is one of her kind of key themes kind of different aspects of vulnerability about qualitative researchers and in their career so what things about self belief and denial the landscape we know we double click on any of the bubbles here it shows us this hierarchy view which is kind of pulls out all the different subcategories we have there so we can see it a little bit better and by default this shows us kind of all those quotes from all the different sources you can see this one comes from Roger it comes from Matilda if we click on it it will take us to that place in the source I don't do that right now because I'm gonna go through and show this a little bit more so the vulnerabilities code here we click just on that just shows us the data just from vulnerabilities but we can also look and see what's coming on from the denial code and anywhere here that we've got any sources of text in Quercus we can copy and paste them so it's probably the most useful way to get stuff in and out of Quercus really is if you're writing up a section in your report or your thesis about denial you know one of these themes that you found in your data you can just tick here to select all of the quotes or you can untick certain ones that aren't relevant you just tick the ones you want and then use the copy button to copy them and then you can paste that into word or PowerPoint or whatever you're writing up and that allows you to have those quotes complete with the attribution so which source they came from to help you kind of have that kind of evidence base and to kind of illuminate the conclusions that you're making in your data so you do that just by kind of double-clicking any of these codes and then you kind of see everything that's under there and one of the things we can do here in the settings I want to put on by by default to try and stop you quantifying the data too much it doesn't tell you how many codes things are coded to these different things but you can turn that option on and then it will give you a number here for for how many times that's that's been done we reload that page you should pop up okay it needs to be reloaded it's restarted before that will come up but now we've got that data let's talk about one of the themes here so one of the themes here is messy journeys and it's one of the themes which came out quite a lot this data set is people saying that they didn't really have a very linear career to becoming a qualitative researcher in academia they had a lot of side steps wasn't necessarily that the kind of idea they had for their career path so this has been quoted as messy journeys and actually comes this is another in vivo code it comes from one of the participants I can't remember which one I see we can find it here no it's not the first one we could run a search for it which we'll do do when I show you that in a second but this concept of messy journeys is quite similar to this notion of kind of a proper job so people kind of a little bit belittling their kind of their own career and it's one of the things that comes out again this vulnerabilities self-belief and denial so there are some already some quite interesting connections going on in the data and what it would be great is if there was some way in quirk us to kind of visualize those connections that's happening between the themes is there a connection between these vulnerabilities and and people's career choices did they have to make them for you know financial reasons did they have to make them because there weren't opportunities in a particular discipline or field they wanted so we've probably got some kind of sense of that from going through and doing this kind of coding analysis but I didn't do this project so I don't so let what we can do is we can right click here on the vulnerabilities code we can choose the overlap view and now what this does is okay I'm going to zoom out a little bit for this one okay just so you can see this it shows us a kind of like a pyramid where the strongest connections are at the top so here the vulnerabilities overlaps with this code memo a memo a is actually just where Kathy's kind of been keeping some of her own kind of thoughts and things but the vulnerabilities overlaps a lot with advice so that's one of the connections between between the data here you can see we've got numbers here which shows us how many times these overlap it also overlaps with this theme unsurprising so it seems almost that vulnerabilities kind of expected a little bit of people at these searches in their career also vulnerabilities around students being difficult and people having expectations and by clicking on one or more we'll see what overlaps there are there's no overlaps so we didn't code any piece of text to be about vulnerabilities and expectations and students difficult being difficult but there are vulnerabilities about students being difficult and so we can go through and we can read those and again we can extract any of these these quotes anywhere we want but always the quote cost is trying to get you to go back to the qualitative side of the data so not rely too much on the fact that there might be more overlap for one thing or another but to go back and read that and see what's going on in the data and if that is something significant okay so let's go back to the home view and zoom in a little bit out sorry 425 that's a bit much okay so yeah so you can you can zoom the separate parts of the canvas just using the mouse wheel actually and you can drag and drop to move this around and there's a lot more space in the web version to play with than there was in the desktop version which a lot of people asking for so there's a couple of the ways we can look at kind of get more into the data one of the other things have not shown so far is is the memos here so you can add memos so I added a question here to Kathy was what after page one is there something missing there I think that's just how it came through from the transcriber but you can select a piece of text here say and drag and drop onto them we can annotate that with a little comment for myself so this is very useful if you're doing something like IPA or in vivo coding in here let's say it might be it might be a note to myself but it also might be a kind of note or question to someone else or something that I want to highlight to look go through and look back later and if you're taking approach we want to go through and annotate the data before you start doing that very kind of analytic process of creating codes and themes the memos is a really great way to do that and it's attached there in all the results and everywhere you look at it so one of the other ways so the memos is a great way to annotate another great way to annotate there's actually a chat feed function built into quercos now this the chat is super useful obviously with when you're collaborating so you can work live on this project with dozens of other people you might be working sequentially and this will flash when you get a message and you can chat directly in the app but because it's saving it in the project it does mean that you kind of get like a diary so often even if I'm working on a project I'm not collaborating with someone I'll use the chat that's kind of like a research journal research diary I'll say today I'm just going to do I guess refactoring so you can write comments and notes to yourself or to your collaborators and this gets a kind of date timestamp in the project as well so you export it you can export like your your whole diary is a kind of spreadsheet which is which is really neat you can also let's just look at some of the other things here now we've got these hundreds of codes actually this is not too bad it's not hundreds at all it's it's just a couple of dozen but often you'll see projects you'll start creating hundreds of thousands of it's certainly happened I've seen thousands of quercos codes in a project before not necessarily recommended but there's a couple of ways like the groups that you can use to selectively turn certain quirks on and off their visibility but you can also filter them so it's quite easy here just to do a search so we're looking for where's the one advice up there it is great and where's the one on careers great there it is okay so you can just show just ones that work for that and we can add that to careers great awesome so yeah this the the quick search there is is pretty useful when you start having lots and lots of codes like this there are also alternative views so if you click on the button here you can have this kind of list view a little odd the way we've zoomed in but anyway it kind of allows us to kind of work with these they work in the same way so you can drag and drop here you can double click here you can move them around to create subcategories and so on but this is kind of if you've used some of the other qualitative software packages that have all the codes just in a list and this is a kind of more more similar way to this it's also useful because it expands out all the subcategories and it also has you can see the description a lot clearer so it's it can be useful depending how how you want to work I'll go back to the canvas view here and you can also kind of put things in an arranged order so now I've got it in a kind of nice grid which is like a little bit a little bit more useful zoom out so you can see that bit better we can also choose how this is sorted so we may do it by date that it was created or the title if we want it alphabetically we can choose whether it's ascending or descending order and so on so that can be quite useful as well when you start to have loads and loads of these as well I should quickly mention while we're while we're looking at the different views is one of the things that we've added recently oh wrong button sorry one of the things we've added recently here is the word cloud so this kind of counts all of the words which are in the project and generates one of these funky word clouds which is interactive and you can use to kind of play with the data so we can see because kind no research so these are the kind of words that coming through in the project and if we click on any of these like research for example we can do a search to see all the results which have the word research in them so 11 instances that weren't coded to everything vulnerabilities has 61 instances of the word research okay so so the word cloud is now a kind of interactive thing we bring that back because the other thing that we've now added is a lot of people were asking for is is customizable stop lists so you kind of want to remove some of the most common words like probably even like yes and so by default it's got a built-in list here of like the top 50 English spoken words so a all and and but we can add other ones here so let's put in so there get rid of that and yes maybe it's useful to see how from people say yes I don't know but now those don't appear so we've kind of got a slightly better kind of view of what's going on there so again the thing to bear in mind with the word cloud it's kind of fun to look at the particular words that people use but from a kind of qualitative analysis standpoint I often find it quite a limiting tool remember it's just kind of counting instances of a word and you know you've you've got to make the cognitive leap to put together different synonyms and you need to think about how well this kind of is representing your data but it's a it's a fun way to kind of explore things that might might be you particularly want to get into so I yeah you might want to see all the instances people talk about their students and so on and then that's that's that's quite easy to do or their PhD and it's sometimes interesting sometimes you see surprising things in there but we'll go back to the main canvas view here great I should also say is just take a short comfort break if you've got any questions feel free to put them in the chat if you're watching live if you missed it and you're watching recorded sorry about that but you can put comments in there anyway we will try and respond as soon as we can and you can always email support quercast.com and we'll happy to answer any questions about the software or process or yeah I mean everyone everyone who who who touches the customer support that's done qualitative research before so everyone's able to comment more on just the technical aspect of the software so do let's know if there's a particular question you have about implementing a particular kind of analysis or a particular kind of data because we can help out with those kind of issues too. Okay so what I want to do now is have a look at some of the filters that we can do on the data so we can start kind of looking at subsets of our data and seeing if there are commonalities and differences there now you might remember earlier we looked at this at creating these source properties we click here Bruce education logistics what we've got is describe this as this person's male they're in Australia the discipline education and then other discipline okay fine so secondary we wanted to keep that separate but you can have multiple options in here as well if you wanted so that was really useful to be able to look at results for example from everyone that works in a particular person at a particular location or everyone that works in a particular discipline and then we can see what commonalities are in there and in Quercos we use the query filter here to do this all right at the moment it's got our tech search here so we'll just remove that tech search in here we'll add a filter by property so there's a ton of things that we can filter basically kind of any information we have in the project so who did a piece of coding who created a particular code and and when and if there's groups or we want to see things just from one particular source we do tech search as well we can do also filter by any of the options so for example if we choose location here so this is one of our properties and then location equals also got not equals here so we want to see everything everybody that was somewhere else for example we got the option here to see let's see everyone that was in England and now these are the results for our researchers who is in England so this is Jackie, Danny, Caroline, Roger, okay great so this is kind of ordered by how often things were coded to one of the particular themes so we've got vulnerabilities here that was kind of the biggest one that we're coding to in this project we'll also look at training gaps and this will show us you know everything which is in the training gap here as it loads through for Jackie and Roger and so these are the people that are from England so this can be useful to kind of look at just a particular part of our respondents but what we can also do is there's a button here which spits the screen into and allows us to do two queries side by side so we've got our results here for where people came from England but let's see add another one for location on there where location equals Australia and so now what we've got is two queries running at the same time nothing yes oh there we go good it's so slow when I'm streaming because the data the streaming data is prioritized so what we can see here is now we've got the results from the people in England on one side and the people in Australia are on the other side so there may be some significant difference going on here that may very well not be but what kind of is actually differences we've got this theme here training gap and it doesn't appear as much here there it is right so the the participants from Australia were not as concerned by gaps in their training or bits of training that they weren't able to access as the people in England obviously it's a different educational system maybe that tells us something interesting well I don't want to rely on the fact that there's just more instances from one set of people than another I'm a qualitative researcher not quantitative one so this view allows me to go through and read qualitatively and see what people are saying what are the people in England saying about their training gap in their career and what are people in Australia saying about the training gap in their career so I can see that side by side and I can read that different story and I can see if there is something significant being suggested by the respondents there or if it's just that I didn't code so much from the respondents in Australia they just didn't talk about it as much so again quirkles is always trying to get you to go back to the text and read and read different read in different ways these filters you can also stack them so we've got location equals England but maybe we also just wanted people who are in England that were in a particular discipline of sociology and so we can add more and more quilt filters here sorry over over the last one but if we add here here sorry add another criterion so we can have let's do what we aim to do before so location equals England and then discipline equals sociology and now we're seeing results it might just be Jackie yeah oh no Roger okay oh right okay right quite a few sociologists in here okay so so now we're looking at people which are based in England and were based in sociology so you can add more and more filters here and you can also use this to filter your your text search results as well so we just want to see what people in Australia said about the word research as opposed to the people in England you can run those kind of queries as well so it's it's it's a really useful tool to kind of explore your data once you've gone through the the laborious but necessary process of coding so I'm just going to click on home here go back to the main view great okay so those are really the kind of the main things that I was going to demonstrate today we've had a look at bringing in some sources of data we've looked at describing those with the source properties and then just now how we can use those with queries to filter the data and see what's going on there we did some of the alternative views and we've created codes and themes we've moved them around we've changed the colors we've changed spelling where we made spelling mistakes and we've looked at other ways that we can store kind of project based data metadata like with the memos and with the chat function as well so I'll stop clicking randomly on the screen here to show things so those are really the kind of the basics of using the software again there's no restrictions on the number of projects you can have with subscription for Quercos cloud the web client is it's going to be the basis of Quercos going forward now we're doing a lot of work adding new features and and basically tweaking things to make it smoother and faster and a little bit more intuitive so if you've got any suggestions we always love to hear them do go and try and sign up for the the free trial and give it a whirl and see how you think give us any feedback if you've been using the desktop client before again we'd really love to see what you think about the tweaks made to the layout if it's making it better or worse we're actively developing this a lot so lots is going to be added to it yeah month by month and one of the great things about it now being a web app is when we make updates and improvements you don't have to do anything you just log in that day and all the new features are there you don't have to download anything you don't have to go to a different page you don't have to do updates or anything like that so everything's being kept right bang up to date so just an opportunity now because I can see there are quite a few viewers if anybody's got any questions but if not that's all I'm going to cover today and go to the website there's also a lot more materials here learn Quercos so manuals and tutorials here there's video of views which pretty similar to what I've done here a step-by-step guide if you prefer kind of these or there's there's a kind of PDF guide that you can use as well you can pop to how do I edit source properties and then kind of take you through that particular bit step-by-step guide here which kind of takes you through generating a kind of typical project and you can always contact us so so don't be shy that's where we're here to help we check emails seven days a week so we try and get back to you as soon as we can so just email support at Quercos.com if you've got any queries and yeah no questions today so thanks so much for coming along and yeah hope to see you using Quercos and answering your questions soon