Open Source Agents for Developers
Use AI to tackle the toil in your backlog, so you can focus on what matters: hard problems, creative challenges, and over-engineering your dotfiles
The ZoomSense project was started on 19 April 2020 as a response to our experiences of using Zoom for teaching.
A few people from the Faculty of IT at Monash University (and friends) got together to see if we could visualize what was happening in Zoom breakout rooms.
We are looking for help in developing this open source tool. So whether you're an academic, educator or developer, we'd love to loop you in!
There is now a thriving community around ZoomSense, where developers are using it as an infrastructure to rapidly develop augmentations to Zoom for teaching, media production and much more!
If you are a developer, head over to our GitLab documentation to get started.
G. Biegel, und V. Cahill. Proceedings of the Second IEEE International Conference on Pervasive Computing and Communications (PerCom'04), Seite 361--. Washington, DC, USA, IEEE Computer Society, (2004)