 Okay, we're recording. Welcome to the banner bunch. This will actually be our last banner bunch of the year. We found that in July and August, not a lot of people come to this because not a lot of people on campus. So the next one will be next fall, in September probably in service around that time. This will be the last book this year. We've got a pretty cool topic this time. So standard format will be introductions of our team and then we'll be talking about banner 9 today. I'll try to give you guys as much information as I can right now and let you know where we're going with that. And then if we have any time, we'll have a open forum at the end. I may go a little bit longer than we have this time or we may do a lot of questions. So we have a new addition to the banner bunch. Dwayne Janks is our new programmer. Dwayne's a LBCC grad. He's got two degrees from here, which is a common threat on this team. And we got him from Polycom. So this is his fourth day here, so be kind to him. Don't make me cry. We also have Mark, Tyler, Teresa, Laurie, Carl. We still have Lena for two more days. She's going to Oregon Coast Community College next week. Katherine Williams, myself, I'm Gabriel, and Michael Coyner. So banner 9. Who here knows everything they need to know about banner 9? And that is what's going to be so much better. Who here has even seen it or you've just maybe just heard about it from us. Right now we're on banner 8, and we're up to speed with banner 8. We've actually caught up with all the updates. We're keeping ourselves up to date. We haven't heard on anything with banner 9, partly because not everything was available to us in the past, partly because it wasn't ready on the infrastructure and the things. But we're getting there. Banner 9 has been in development for a long time from the ocean. In fact, I think back when the sun guard is when they started making moves to banner 9 or making plans or starting development, it's been like six or seven years and it's gone through a bit of a history. In fact, they rebranded it at one time. They called it banner XB for a while. Now they've gone back to calling it banner 9, and hopefully it stays there. But the features have come a long way, and they've got a good vision for this. The big things that it delivers is a modern interface. Banner 8 has gotten stale while we've been building this. In fact, it was probably stale when it first came out. This interface will look nice. This interface can be used in any browser. It's not dependent on Java or Oracle Forms. It works on a computer or a tablet or a phone. It resizes the way that we expect technology to do nowadays. They've changed some of the navigation in IMB, but they haven't changed a whole lot more than the look and feel. And then in self-service, they've had a ton of functionality. So I'm going to go through IMB and then WebRider and show screenshots. You have to give me a grain of salt on the banner 9 screenshots. I got them from like sales materials, and I borrowed them from Alucian. Not all of them are perfect. Not a home of display on here, real nice. But I'll walk us through the core features I want you to see. Then at the very end of this, I'll give you a lot of information where you can learn anything and everything you want to know about Banner 9 on your own. So IMB, the administrative pages of Banner, that's where we do most of our work. It's the flip side of WebRider. It's the ugly screens that we've fought with issues with Java going away and having to get working with Firefox again and that sort of thing. They're going to start calling them administrative pages because they're going to start with what I thought I'd run into then. Alucian's delivered all the transformations, what they call a transformation, so they've taken all the banner forms. And without changing the functionality, they've built the user interface. They've built it into a web browser. So when you're used to going to Spade and Insign, it's gassed as far as all those still exist. All the functionality still works. You'll still do the same processes, but it will look different. The analogy I like to use is it's a lot like when Microsoft Office went from 2003 to 2007. If everyone remembers that, some of us are too young. We went from the top right or top left and then we built the ribbon. And when all of us started using that functionality, it was a bit shocking. It was a bit of a change. But after you used it for about a week or so, there's no way you'd go back. It was a change of the bound purpose and it was done well. That's how I like to think in Banner 9. So let's look at some of these. And I'm going to start with probably the most shocking change of all, our homepage when you log in. So right now, this is Banner 8. This is actually our product screen from last night. You've got the go-to menu where you type in Spade or P-Pade or Safari or whatnot. You've got some menus down below that I don't know if people use a whole lot, but they're available to navigate through all the different forms. That's most of the functionality that's on here. It will change to something that looks more like this. Obviously, we'll brand this a little bit differently. We'll have Limben Community College, maybe a nice picture of our game or something like that. But the big thing that's changed here is they've modeled it to look a little bit like Google, right? That big search bar right in the middle is your go-to button where you type in Spade or P-Pade. It still navigates the same way, but it works a whole lot differently. If you do use those menus, there's a menu button in the top left of the screen. It's a little hard to see on this screen because it's a little cramped, but you would click on that and it would expand out your menu options and you could navigate that way. For those of us that like to go to files, go to the forms we've been to in the past, that's the third little icon up there. It looks like a little folder with a number up there. Those are all the forms that I've been to. Then our user information's up in the upper right for sign-in. It actually behaves pretty much the same way. It just works a whole lot differently. It's got a little bit extra functionality that I really like in that the search bar actually acts like a search bar you'd expect on the internet nowadays. As you start typing, it's pretty much predicted text will start populating options below it. As you start typing in Spade and you hit S, a bunch of S forms will show up below it. As you continue typing, it will narrow down that list to what you're looking for. What's even more exciting about that is that pollution is moving away from speaking banner. Spade and it's far-edged and all of the acronyms we know and love that still exist, but you can also type in person and all the person points will show up. I think people that are coming new to banner will never even use the acronyms. They'll just know that. I want to go look up registrations. I'll start typing registration and what I'm looking for will show up in my results. Another thing to see here is it's really hard to see on this screen is the keyboard shortcuts in the bottom right. You can click on that and see all your shortcuts, the hotkeys, for those of us that use hotkeys. Most of them will stay the same, but a couple will change because now we're inside a web browser and F5 and an F in a browser moves refresh and they're not going to be able to rewrite that sort of functionality. So a couple of them will change with most of them the same, all of them are available right there. So a pretty big change on this screen. Here's P-Paidon. P-Paidon is very similar to P-Paidon or I think F-P-I-A-D. You put in your ID at the top, the next block's down, and then you've got a bunch of tabs of information and blocks of information about who this person is. These screens have been changed so that all that functionality still exists, but it looks different. It looks a lot cleaner. It'll display nicely in a web browser and as you shrink and expand or use a different sort of tablet, some of these features will react to that accordingly. You still put in your ID at the top. You still come down. All the tabs exist. There's a little bit more functionality along the blocks. There are things that you might expect intuitively with the web, these carrots by the names, like the little down arrows. If you click on it, this will expand and contract. You can also, all the icons across the top are gone. Those have been moved. Options are in this, this is a list of related forms so you'll be able to see that still, but most of them are underneath these settings or tools. A lot of those features we don't use a lot, or they do move to here, but pop these down and then it opens up and you have all your options available. For those of us that roll back a lot, there's now a start over button. That's the roll back for F10 or the save button. It's now down the bottom right. Let's look at a few other features. Here's a form of MBA P-Bud. Similar, you've got key block information at the top and then you've got your tabs and information. This one might be a little harder to see, but your key block is still at the top. Put all your information in and come into the form and then you have your tabs. You have your box information. I wanted to show that this one was actually resized a little bit so some of the words have appeared now next to the top right, so you can actually see what those are. I'm guessing the previous screenshot was off of a tablet and this one's off of a screen. There's also four forms that have lots of repeating information. Down on the bottom left, you can actually next block over to the next records. You can see how many records there are. You can skip to the end. Sort of things that we actually expect from a web page nowadays, but are new to banner. This one I think is probably the most exciting one of the changes to them, what you can feel. This is the registration history form so far. This form can get on wheeling really quick. You've got a lot of information on people that have been here a long time and you've got to scroll up and down and it's hard to keep track of things. What this will change to is something that looks more like a spreadsheet and I've actually had to expand this off the screen just to be able to show it so you can see it in the back, but it'll look and act like a spreadsheet does nowadays. You can reorder the columns all you want. You can sort it. You can filter in that tools menu in the top right. There'll be the ability to export Excel or CSV. It makes it a lot more usable. You've got a lot of information on the form. I've kind of gone through a few examples and I'd like to take a minute and I can go back or we can ask questions about solicits. I'd like to pause for a minute. I don't think I've hit on everything that's coming to banner, but what I really want you to take away from this is that it looks different, but the functionality that we're familiar with is still there. Everything that you know right now still applies and so picking this up real should be really quick. What's going to be really cool is getting familiar with some of the newer features like the ability to resource or export or how it really doesn't work. Does anybody have any questions on some of those before I dive into WebRunner? Can you tell them what you're expecting there tonight? Oh, we'll get into that. I'm sure that's one thing everyone's thinking. Can you actually fill out one of the forms for us and show us how to? I cannot yet. These are just screenshots from Ellucian documentation. Okay. Yeah, but we'll get into that. So someday he will show us how to move around in these forms. Absolutely. So WebRunner, I get the sense that they just rebuild the whole thing from around a self-service banner and as they're doing that, they're adding a lot of cool functionality. Things that we would expect that people will be able to view for themselves online. These are most of the areas that they're adding. They're adding profile pages where they take a whole lot of information that's spread out across WebRunner or even banner, condensing it into one page that makes a lot of sense. For advisors, the student profile's going to be huge because you'll be able to see pretty much any glance at everything about a student. You'll be able to add notes and that sort of thing. Registration's gotten completely overhauled and we'll look at that in a minute. Attendance tracking is a new feature that I think could be used if we use it on campus. The way grade entry is done is change direct deposit. I'm really thrilled on it. We actually have built our own direct deposit system. What they have built does everything ours does and more. So that's our baseline plan for that option. We're just going to move in and get it put in. We're going to roll over to banner nine and obviously our own home growth system. There's an employee profile and then a few other things that I don't have a whole lot of information on but I know that they're new functionality. There's a new purchasing thing for finance that allows you to request purchases through WebRunner. And then there's event management which may or may not make sense to compete with the MS on our campus. Probably one of the biggest things that I think we can take advantage of is communication management tool here. Banner eight had comp plans and you could write letters or do mail mortgages or send anything else but they're all pretty clunky and kind of used and they never look great. Communication management really levels up the ability to send out information from Banner automatically and directly to students. It's pretty slick. So I don't have one-to-one pictures of these because it doesn't even make sense anymore to show like the registration screen from our current WebRunner but this is the new registration screens. And you notice there's a lot of information on the screen but it's a lot more user friendly than the old one. The old one had just put in there's like five or six blocks putting your CRN figure it out. This one you can actually search for your classes in several ways. You'll notice that there's actually a button for plans. This will connect directly to degree works. You'll be able to just if you've already gone through the plan on what you're doing with your advisor or guided pathways you just suck in your registration and hit go. Down to the bottom right you can see the status of everything. Whether you're registered or wait listed you have options on what sort of actions you can do. You can get out and look at your tuition fees directly. And then on the bottom left is a more visual representation. We actually pay for a third party right now college schedulers to do that functionality around this. This may absolutely be for that third party to all say it's money. This is our class roster. So we went from class information and grading a home run systems of the faculty self-service about a year and a half ago. This is going to bring back some of the functionality that people lost when we did that and primarily the ability to export your roster out to a spreadsheet. That was one of the key features I heard from the class information and grading that people missed when we moved to the baseline. The ability to export this whole list to a CSV has come back. This is now the baseline functionality. Even though this is hard to read one of the things that thrills me in this screenshot is everybody can see that orange button right there. That means that person's confidential. It stands out. You can immediately see that person's confidential and that you want to be careful how we communicate with them. You can reorder your columns. You can re-sort things. You can email people more easily. I think that this is going to be a lot of walking around with current processors. This is a screenshot of your faculty grading screens. What I like in here is that you can actually see in the top all the classes that you have rather than having to go back and forth and then you just click within this and get to your other classes and put in more grids. In the top left of this it's kind of difficult. You can see in this screenshot, but these are progress bars. I can see how far I'm done grading this course. If I'm only grading a couple people that far this far, I'll only have a little bit of information in it. Once I'm done, it will fill out the degree. Again, you can re-sort. You can filter on this. On the right-hand side, you have information about that course that you can collapse down so we have more real estate for the grading. In the top right is the most exciting feature that I like. You can import grades from Excel. So if you've done all of your grading in Excel, as long as the Excel spreadsheet is formatted right, you just import that and it will all go right with banner. One of the key features they've built into this that you format it correctly is you can export your grade roster or grade sheet and then fill in all the grades and then import it back in. So it gives a lot more flexibility on how faculty would be grading. This is the attendance tracking screen. I think this is pretty user-friendly. I'd love to see this on a phone in front of a class and just give everybody a cheer. You can also see a little bit more functionality. You can have pictures for students. That's something we're interested in, having pictures of everybody, your ID pictures that we all have somewhere on a server. I'd love to get those in the banner and have this connected with your accounts. Other things that are in the attendance tracking screen, you can see more analytics like the attendance rates for people. If you're using the attendance tracking and you're on top of it, you can see if somebody's been missing half the classes right at a glance. There's also the ability to track the amount of time that we attended if you want to know that level of detail. I know we have some of those requirements around grants and that sort of thing. You can track this person who's here for 15 minutes and it'll store that information in the banner so we can go later. This one, I know the text is really small, but this is the direct deposit screen. I wanted to just show that you can add multiple accounts. You can divide up your deposits however you want, by monetary amounts, by percentages, by whatever's left over. You can have as many accounts as you want. It's almost identical what we've built here. Yeah. This is what we could use. I mean right now we use tutor tracking in the classrooms that students can scan and as we transition from check-in stations we're going to tutor track he asks. They could use that. They could use Moodle as attendance tracking in it. This is going to be the webrunner attendance tracking. So we've actually got several different ways to do attendance tracking at campus. I don't know if there's a best way yet. They're all pretty new. And then here's one of those profile pages. This is the employee profile. This takes pretty much everything in employee self-service and puts it on one page. That's pretty easy to use. Right at a glance I can see my vacation leave, my sick leave, right at the top there. I can see my pay information, my paystubs, my benefits, my taxes. It's all on one page now. Rather than having to go back and forth the menus and figure out where I'm at. This is pretty exciting. Another thing in the bottom right is something that we'll hopefully eventually get to where you can enter your time sheets in webrunner. Web time entry is something we definitely love to have. And there's probably things that may or may not make sense here because this is the standard, the illusian delivery for pretty much everybody. But the student profile looks similar to this. You have a picture. You have all the information selected in the workplace. And you can look at it and point out so you can get a lot more out of webrunner than you currently do. All right. Any questions back there on all of that functionality? You can go back and look at those screens or poke at them a little bit. Again, just screenshots. But I'm happy to answer any questions on that. I think there's a lot of functionality that we're going to get that's new. And in theory, it's all pretty intuitive. There's a lot less training in the self-service end. You know there's a lot new. All right. So I grabbed this slide directly out of illusian documentation as well. In their theory, this is how you roll out Banner-9 on a campus. I've deleted the dates that they put on this. It's completely unrealistic. We're actually about a third of the way through this right now. So at the very beginning of this is getting our infrastructure in place. Mark's been working really hard on ESM and single sign-on for Banner. We've been working very hard on removing a lot of modifications. Things will become roadblocks farther down this line. And then on our end, we've become a little bit more familiar with Banner-9. So where we're getting to is now into that blue-middle area where we need to stand up a sandbox but people can start poking at it. Start taking through how we're going to roll this out because we don't have to roll it all out once. We can do one piece at a time and have Banner-9 and Banner-8 sent inside my site. There's a lot of planning that's going to happen over the summer. So that is our current goal right now is just to get ESM, DIS wrapped up, get Banner-9 stood up in a sandbox and then plan out how we're going to roll this out for real. The big date that's actually real on this that's a hard deadline is the end time. We have to be on Banner-9 by December of 2018 which I think is pretty conservative right now. We've got about a year and a half. The reason for that is Ellucian's going to stop supporting Banner-8 the end of next year. Not just because they want to but because a lot of technologies are just disappearing. Oracle Forms are going to be de-supported. Java is already out of all browsers. It's going to become more and more difficult as time goes on to keep Banner-8 up and running alive. So getting to Banner-9 before then is a hard deadline. I think we're going to be on that before then. My goal is over the next year is to start rolling out either all of them together or piece by piece. We want to figure that out over the summer. One thing I can say is that if we do do it piece by piece the areas that have worked hardest on removing modifications and that new stuff from Banner are going to have the easiest transition. It'll be a long lines of when you want to go. Areas that still have a lot of modifications or that new stuff we're going to have to rebuild all that stuff from scratch. So moving those are going to take a lot longer. All right. So there's a ton of information out there that everybody has at their fingertips right now on Banner-9. And I'm starting to give the push for all of us to start and go out and learn, make a little bit of time and figure out what Banner-9 looks like and start developing questions on what is this going to mean to me. Out there on the Illusian Hub we encourage all of you to go out to e-communities and all of that. On the Illusian Hub there's a Banner-9 guide that you can request. And when you go into that you show you what it looks like. It's really cool. Let's see here. So everybody's familiar with the Illusian Hub? Does this need anybody? I love the Illusian Hub. It is awesome. Out there if you don't have this Banner-9 guide you can request it from the apps. And in the Banner-9 guide I've already got it up. It will tell you some of it's a little more technical on how to get there. Check out your modifications turn on single sign-on and get ready to go. What you're going to want to know is all this information. You can go look at all these available areas of functionality that call maps and start getting information on webinars, watching videos of how this is used at other schools, watch the presentations from Illusian Live this year at the conference that was in Orlando. Read the documentation. Everything we know about Banner-9 is in here. And I encourage you guys to explore it as well. To mention the webinars that are out there they record all their webinars. So if you miss a webinar you can always go back and watch it. We're going to start collaborating with a lot of our information that we learned onto the Band-Ox so it's going to be available there as well. But again the Illusian Hub is really where we're getting all that information from. And most importantly ask us. If you're curious about Banner-9 shoot us an email or catch us in the hallway come to Banner-Bunches. We're more than happy to share information and we're going to try to communicate as much as possible as these start coming. Especially when we start having deadlines on this is when student screens are going to change or this is when web runners are going to change we're going to have to communicate with everybody. I'm starting brains from different ideas on the ways we can do that. That'll start coming as someone moves on. Questions? I got to do that pretty quick. Is there any sorry, this isn't the voice is there anything that you need from end users I think probably the where we'll leave from you is when we actually get a sandbox up and running and you get your hands on it we'll need your feedback. We'll want to know what is easy what is difficult is we'll have to assess what do we need to invest more in training on or what is just intuitive and you might want to we'll learn that as we go. One thing I've heard from other schools that have actually started making a loop pattern nine is that there's almost no training support costs just disappear because it is so intuitive it's so easy to do this that you just get in there and start running. Students tend to love this and in fact once the students get their hands on the web runner and it's changed they'll start commanding things be changed. They'll start expecting why is it still under over here when it's pretty over here. That's true. That's that's the feedback we've heard from schools that have moved to better nine and have done the transition slowly to say pretty soon they can't move past you. Another question. And excuse me I'm sorry I didn't answer but thank you on such a long but with the new web runner is that new interface going to happen only after everyone's off of 89 when all of them are changed or disappointed to work independently with those students? We have the ability to be kind of granular how we move it out but we're going to have to figure out over the summer how how will we do that. Ellucian built the functionality to be able to move that granular because they didn't have everything built efforts but now that everything's been built they're starting to encourage people to just make the leap and do the whole change at once. It kind of depends we're going to plan that out over the summer and especially once we have our hands on it we have an instance we can stand up and see what it looks like side by side or see what it's if it's difficult to maintain both of them side by side but it may it may guide us a little bit. Some of that might be you guys as well maybe feedback give us feedback that you know I love Banner 9 here but now that I've got to go back to Banner 8 I'd rather you just pull off the banner even make it all at once. Just dive in. Other questions. It doesn't have to be about Banner 9 that's as good as it's time. What are the intentions of NWEUG? I'd love to mention NWEUG. Does everybody know what that is or has anybody heard of it? NWEUG the acronym it stands for Northwest Delucius User Screw. So in the Banner world there's conferences throughout the year and big ones, delucian lives that's East Coast, West Coast it's a global conference. There's 9,000 people who go to that. I encourage you to go to that but it's expensive. NWEUG is a regional version of that it's much smaller only a couple hundred people show up to those. The registration is a hundred bucks. We, the Inven Community College are hosting it this year. So what is the dates? August. August 7th and 8th. August 7th and 8th. They will be here on this campus. Currently we're requesting proposals to fill in session but there's already about four or 50 of them. We're trying to get as many people to register for that as possible. I know a lot of people are coming from Oregon State and from Washington and Idaho. It's going to be really neat. Last year it was up at Pacific and we really enjoyed it. So we're looking forward to it on this campus. I highly recommend everybody go to that. I'll be presenting on the baseline project. HR will be presenting on the Partnip faculty system that they've built and that we're going to transition into Banner line. Well, Ellucian will be there. Ellucian will be there and they're presenting about. Ellucian has about 13 sessions that they're presenting. They'll be presenting as well. And they'll have a ton of people here including their senior vice president in charge of technology. Right, John Kofke will be here. A lot of their mentors will be here as well. A hug booth. Lori's going to have a hug booth. Hello, hugs. I am. It's a revenue generator. Do we pay Lori for a hug? In addition to Ellucian, a lot of their vendors, their partners in here as well. So we're working on a runner technology here and e-visions and cash and act. And all the other companies, the third party companies that work with Ellucian, they'll have a presence as well. Questions? Making a assumption that with Banner 9, what screens you can get in. Yeah, that's what I'm talking about. What I'm bought for eyes, to work in and see will be the same. Your access will stay the same. And with Banner 9, delete the Banner Q form. A new employee, is it still going to be the same Banner Q form that was sent to Lori? The access form? Yeah, that'll stay the same. So the form's not going to take place? Not yet. Probably, we'll move that to laser vision at some point. So that'll all stay the same. The access will stay the same. Some of the features might highlight fine-grained access a little bit more. I think there's one screenshot back here. We go way back. Let's see. I think on this one, you can notice that some of these fields are dark and then some of them are grayed out a little bit, but you can still see the information in them. That's because you have access to change these ones, but these ones you just have query access to. So there's some granularity of control that we currently have, but it's much more better displayed in Banner 9. Other questions? Everyone's excited about Banner 9? Is the feedback good? Thumbs up, thumbs down. It looks good. Like we've done on a couple of projects now, we're going to try to manage changes as much as possible. That's my level of focus, is making sure that nothing is a surprise. We don't pull the rug out from anybody, and everybody, if they need training, gets the training they need, we're going to have to communicate a little bit more broadly than the folks in the history of this time. We're going to have to communicate with faculty a lot more on this change. We're going to have to communicate with our students at a level that we haven't done in the past. So it's going to be a bigger challenge for us, communication-wise, but I'm very confident we can hit that, especially since we've been mindful of it ahead of time. We're also watching other institutions in the neighborhood because every Banner institution in the world is making its leap right now. Oregon State is making it. I think Lane Community College is a little ahead of us. Chemectos, Longside of us, COCC is doing the same thing. There's 2,400 Banner schools in the world doing this right now. So there's a lot of support out there in the community as well. Do you have any of the Banner 9 screenshots for creating courses instead of SSA, SCT, and Banner 8? I don't know if I have a very specific shot of that. I can look for one or I can request one. Can you move this in? That would be cool. But it's still going to be Sausect. Yeah. Of course, of course you depend on where you're doing your work and it's still going to be the same information close to the same layout, but it's going to have that same kind of... The nicer look to it and the ability to class and filter. And that's right. There is like, I mean, I'm really excited about Banner 9. And Dave did say you won't need much training, but there will be some questions. And you buy a new car, you already know how to drive, but you still want to know where's the spare tire and how do I adjust the seat and where's the hood release? Because they might be in different places and that's going to be exactly the same thing. So we're going to have to sit with you and say, so looking at this, do you think you can do everything you want to do? And if not, then let's figure out how that will now work. I want to have a really good answer for everyone as I come out of the top of the screen. How do I do... If I press this button in Banner 8, where do I do that Banner 8? Right. That's one of my few goals. We can show that that's... If a hockey has changed, what does it change to? And they're sure it'll be your cover. Right. But your job and the knowledge you have and how to do it will change. You still know how to drive. It's just maybe how to adjust the gears. Yep. That's a great analogy. My thank you. Also under the hood, it's a lot like going from a fast... Banner 8 is the old diesel engine. And Banner 9 is the Tesla, the new hottest electric engine, and less than 100 group of cars. And in a very, very much... Quick. I think we should go with his full analogy. Yeah. Of course. I like it. I like it. I like it. I like it. I like it. I like it. Yeah. If you're probably updating Java or your computer, so you can write Oracle Forms, that goes well. Yeah. Yeah. Because Oracle Forms is very good. Oracle is going to be support with Oracle Forms sometimes in the next 12 years. Yeah. So we want to use it. Which is why they're pushing us to go with Banner 9. Banner 9 is not reliant on the Java runtime environment anymore. It's actually going to be running in your web browser. Like it used to be. But it's not a plug-in. It's actually using the web technologies built into your web browser to give you already information. Right. So on the backside, it's written in Java. Whereas Oracle Forms right now are written in PLSGL. So Oracle Forms is going away. Now everything's going to be in the web browser. It's not going to be. And you can use Chrome to use Firefox. Edge. Edge is a big one. Edge is a great one. I like it. Internet Explorer if you are so good. Internet Explorer is going to have less and less of a reason to use it around on this campus. Yeah. Never get it wrong. Okay. That's key to having it here. So I just heard. Does that still exist? I don't think so. It belongs on our board with the rotary phone. Oh, that's the other one. I think you probably told me that years ago. And there's a ton of work that we're doing on the back of our users and everything I see connected with others. If you notice anything, it's just a few barriers in terms of your... Mark's doing a ton of work and has been for more than a year. Long and rare case. I don't even think about it. A lot of that has to come with the fact we're actually building an entirely new system from scratch and consists of seven different servers. And we're about, well, out of the 80 extracts we're on step 51. So we're about two-thirds of the way through it. Three, four of the machines are actually built and done very well. Yeah. So if we're doing our job right, you won't notice a thing on all that work. Yeah. And we're doing that concurrently with starting up a test single sign-on system, which I was actually able to turn on just yesterday. Yeah. We're going to have to have a session on that. On single sign-on, we'll have to finish about how that's going to change things. Does everybody know what single sign-on means? Yeah. Then you sign it in once and then everything else just works. Just switch to that. I find things go up. That was really nice. That was huge. We have a requirement on the banner end for single sign-on. So it'll work within the banner world at a minimum, but we'd love to start connecting up to the rule or Gmail or other systems that we have on campus so that we have less and less credentials to keep track of. Yeah. I think as of April, 2016, all new machines were basically just a dose of everything that's cloud-based or server-based. Yeah. They were really just using a screen interface. Where was that at? At Larimer family in Colorado. Oh, yeah. Virtualizing everything. Yeah. It felt a little weird in the courts, you know, for the new users, they were just kind of afraid to go out and just go find their copy or whatever it was and just spend that year to go. So young technology-based education, they were just ready to go. It felt a little awkward for them. I think that's going to be a common thread through this, that all of us have to go through the change, but the new people coming to our system, the training of banishing a lot less. You're not going to have to memorize what the so far rigs means. You're just going to know, I go to the registration screen and I do registration stuff. It's going to be a lot more intuitive. Other questions, comments? All right, guys. Well, thank you for joining us. We'll keep in touch over the summer and next fall, we'll just start seeing a lot of us. Not me. I don't work in the other area. I don't work in the other area.