Discuss Scratch

DatOneLefty
Scratcher
1000+ posts

School IT

DeleteThisAcount wrote:

the it teacher never calls on me. just because i know how to use a chromebook at my home


Does anybody ever feel super excited for hour of code until they start by teaching you how to click and hold to drag blocks?
My school did the hour of code last year. I didn't do it, i just continued to write the code i normally. My sister's college did the hour of code, i did it when she came home a week later and i did it in like 10 minutes lol
PintOfMilk
Scratcher
1000+ posts

School IT

DatOneLefty wrote:

DeleteThisAcount wrote:

the it teacher never calls on me. just because i know how to use a chromebook at my home


Does anybody ever feel super excited for hour of code until they start by teaching you how to click and hold to drag blocks?
My school did the hour of code last year. I didn't do it, i just continued to write the code i normally. My sister's college did the hour of code, i did it when she came home a week later and i did it in like 10 minutes lol
Should call it ten minutes of code
DeleteThisAcount
Scratcher
1000+ posts

School IT

DatOneLefty wrote:

DeleteThisAcount wrote:

the it teacher never calls on me. just because i know how to use a chromebook at my home


Does anybody ever feel super excited for hour of code until they start by teaching you how to click and hold to drag blocks?
My school did the hour of code last year. I didn't do it, i just continued to write the code i normally. My sister's college did the hour of code, i did it when she came home a week later and i did it in like 10 minutes lol
how to do hour of code in 2 seconds

1. inspect element

done
Blaze349
Scratcher
1000+ posts

School IT

DatOneLefty wrote:

DeleteThisAcount wrote:

-snip-
I know it is super easy. I guess its a way to get kids interested in code but it doesn't work.
Ex0gen
Scratcher
82 posts

School IT

My school is very tedious with spying on us so we don't mess ‘bout on the PCs (Yet in most computer rooms it doesn’t even work) but keeps all our passwords on a spreadsheet, that is ‘hidden’ in a lot of IT teachers desks, in my first year we would constantly forget our passwords so they'd whip it out and tell us.

Also, on most of the PCs you can just unplug the ethernet cable, log in with practically any username and password, once your on the PC just plug the ethernet cable back in to get internet access back and your own a temp account with alot less restrictions. I've never tried it, because they have CCTV so if they see some kid on the logs using a TEMP account messing with the PC they'll probably know who it was. Probably ain't illegal to unplug ethernet cables, but it might be against the schools policy.

Another thing is whenever they decide to randomly change up the layout of the site teachers and students use to track homework, all the assigned tasks get wiped so you have no idea what homework you have until all the teachers re-set the tasks.

Whenever you wanna print something off in most rooms with computers, you have to leave your desk and retrieve your paper before coming back and sitting down. This has caused multiple kids to get in trouble because people have searched inappropriate things on google on their account.

Sometimes they keep mark-schemes on the school's student ‘area’ (They're are student and teacher areas, of course the teacher one is locked off to students. Basically they are hard-drives where worksheets and resources are kept. You can only copy as a student in this area.)

For a long time people brought flash-games into school on thumb-drives, the fix they had was to just ban the flash file type they were using.

Most if not all monitors have weird resolutions, are way to bright or way to dark, have had their colours messed with as well.

Most PCs have had their disk drives ripped out because people kept putting food and other stuff in there.

Multiple PCs have been bricked because someone ripped or pushed in the power button too hard, breaking it.

Blaze349
Scratcher
1000+ posts

School IT

Wow.
ninjagolloyd
Scratcher
500+ posts

School IT

Ex0gen wrote:

My school is very tedious with spying on us so we don't mess ‘bout on the PCs (Yet in most computer rooms it doesn’t even work) but keeps all our passwords on a spreadsheet, that is ‘hidden’ in a lot of IT teachers desks, in my first year we would constantly forget our passwords so they'd whip it out and tell us.

Also, on most of the PCs you can just unplug the ethernet cable, log in with practically any username and password, once your on the PC just plug the ethernet cable back in to get internet access back and your own a temp account with alot less restrictions. I've never tried it, because they have CCTV so if they see some kid on the logs using a TEMP account messing with the PC they'll probably know who it was. Probably ain't illegal to unplug ethernet cables, but it might be against the schools policy.

Another thing is whenever they decide to randomly change up the layout of the site teachers and students use to track homework, all the assigned tasks get wiped so you have no idea what homework you have until all the teachers re-set the tasks.

Whenever you wanna print something off in most rooms with computers, you have to leave your desk and retrieve your paper before coming back and sitting down. This has caused multiple kids to get in trouble because people have searched inappropriate things on google on their account.

Sometimes they keep mark-schemes on the school's student ‘area’ (They're are student and teacher areas, of course the teacher one is locked off to students. Basically they are hard-drives where worksheets and resources are kept. You can only copy as a student in this area.)

For a long time people brought flash-games into school on thumb-drives, the fix they had was to just ban the flash file type they were using.

Most if not all monitors have weird resolutions, are way to bright or way to dark, have had their colours messed with as well.

Most PCs have had their disk drives ripped out because people kept putting food and other stuff in there.

Multiple PCs have been bricked because someone ripped or pushed in the power button too hard, breaking it.

Reminds me of our iPads. They use MDM and they threaten that if you delete the MDM all your stuff will be deleted.
All our stuff is backed up on google.
Also, the MDM doesn't erase anything when it's removed–it's been done before. xD
bybb
Scratcher
1000+ posts

School IT

Ex0gen wrote:

My school is very tedious with spying on us so we don't mess ‘bout on the PCs (Yet in most computer rooms it doesn’t even work) but keeps all our passwords on a spreadsheet, that is ‘hidden’ in a lot of IT teachers desks, in my first year we would constantly forget our passwords so they'd whip it out and tell us.

Also, on most of the PCs you can just unplug the ethernet cable, log in with practically any username and password, once your on the PC just plug the ethernet cable back in to get internet access back and your own a temp account with alot less restrictions. I've never tried it, because they have CCTV so if they see some kid on the logs using a TEMP account messing with the PC they'll probably know who it was. Probably ain't illegal to unplug ethernet cables, but it might be against the schools policy.

Another thing is whenever they decide to randomly change up the layout of the site teachers and students use to track homework, all the assigned tasks get wiped so you have no idea what homework you have until all the teachers re-set the tasks.

Whenever you wanna print something off in most rooms with computers, you have to leave your desk and retrieve your paper before coming back and sitting down. This has caused multiple kids to get in trouble because people have searched inappropriate things on google on their account.

Sometimes they keep mark-schemes on the school's student ‘area’ (They're are student and teacher areas, of course the teacher one is locked off to students. Basically they are hard-drives where worksheets and resources are kept. You can only copy as a student in this area.)

For a long time people brought flash-games into school on thumb-drives, the fix they had was to just ban the flash file type they were using.

Most if not all monitors have weird resolutions, are way to bright or way to dark, have had their colours messed with as well.

Most PCs have had their disk drives ripped out because people kept putting food and other stuff in there.

Multiple PCs have been bricked because someone ripped or pushed in the power button too hard, breaking it.

We have the P drive and the L drive. The P drive effectively being your user directory and the L drive being a generic network drive. They also deleted all the source files of my game engine off of my USB.
DatOneLefty
Scratcher
1000+ posts

School IT

bybb wrote:

Ex0gen wrote:

My school is very tedious with spying on us so we don't mess ‘bout on the PCs (Yet in most computer rooms it doesn’t even work) but keeps all our passwords on a spreadsheet, that is ‘hidden’ in a lot of IT teachers desks, in my first year we would constantly forget our passwords so they'd whip it out and tell us.

Also, on most of the PCs you can just unplug the ethernet cable, log in with practically any username and password, once your on the PC just plug the ethernet cable back in to get internet access back and your own a temp account with alot less restrictions. I've never tried it, because they have CCTV so if they see some kid on the logs using a TEMP account messing with the PC they'll probably know who it was. Probably ain't illegal to unplug ethernet cables, but it might be against the schools policy.

Another thing is whenever they decide to randomly change up the layout of the site teachers and students use to track homework, all the assigned tasks get wiped so you have no idea what homework you have until all the teachers re-set the tasks.

Whenever you wanna print something off in most rooms with computers, you have to leave your desk and retrieve your paper before coming back and sitting down. This has caused multiple kids to get in trouble because people have searched inappropriate things on google on their account.

Sometimes they keep mark-schemes on the school's student ‘area’ (They're are student and teacher areas, of course the teacher one is locked off to students. Basically they are hard-drives where worksheets and resources are kept. You can only copy as a student in this area.)

For a long time people brought flash-games into school on thumb-drives, the fix they had was to just ban the flash file type they were using.

Most if not all monitors have weird resolutions, are way to bright or way to dark, have had their colours messed with as well.

Most PCs have had their disk drives ripped out because people kept putting food and other stuff in there.

Multiple PCs have been bricked because someone ripped or pushed in the power button too hard, breaking it.

We have the P drive and the L drive. The P drive effectively being your user directory and the L drive being a generic network drive. They also deleted all the source files of my game engine off of my USB.


really tho, did you put your engine files in any other place?
bybb
Scratcher
1000+ posts

School IT

DatOneLefty wrote:

bybb wrote:

Ex0gen wrote:

My school is very tedious with spying on us so we don't mess ‘bout on the PCs (Yet in most computer rooms it doesn’t even work) but keeps all our passwords on a spreadsheet, that is ‘hidden’ in a lot of IT teachers desks, in my first year we would constantly forget our passwords so they'd whip it out and tell us.

Also, on most of the PCs you can just unplug the ethernet cable, log in with practically any username and password, once your on the PC just plug the ethernet cable back in to get internet access back and your own a temp account with alot less restrictions. I've never tried it, because they have CCTV so if they see some kid on the logs using a TEMP account messing with the PC they'll probably know who it was. Probably ain't illegal to unplug ethernet cables, but it might be against the schools policy.

Another thing is whenever they decide to randomly change up the layout of the site teachers and students use to track homework, all the assigned tasks get wiped so you have no idea what homework you have until all the teachers re-set the tasks.

Whenever you wanna print something off in most rooms with computers, you have to leave your desk and retrieve your paper before coming back and sitting down. This has caused multiple kids to get in trouble because people have searched inappropriate things on google on their account.

Sometimes they keep mark-schemes on the school's student ‘area’ (They're are student and teacher areas, of course the teacher one is locked off to students. Basically they are hard-drives where worksheets and resources are kept. You can only copy as a student in this area.)

For a long time people brought flash-games into school on thumb-drives, the fix they had was to just ban the flash file type they were using.

Most if not all monitors have weird resolutions, are way to bright or way to dark, have had their colours messed with as well.

Most PCs have had their disk drives ripped out because people kept putting food and other stuff in there.

Multiple PCs have been bricked because someone ripped or pushed in the power button too hard, breaking it.

We have the P drive and the L drive. The P drive effectively being your user directory and the L drive being a generic network drive. They also deleted all the source files of my game engine off of my USB.


really tho, did you put your engine files in any other place?
I had a backup of my engine, but that was a few changes ago. They didn't delete the compiled jar file though (I was doing it in java before) so I just decompiled it.
Blaze349
Scratcher
1000+ posts

School IT

bybb wrote:

DatOneLefty wrote:

bybb wrote:

Ex0gen wrote:

My school is very tedious with spying on us so we don't mess ‘bout on the PCs (Yet in most computer rooms it doesn’t even work) but keeps all our passwords on a spreadsheet, that is ‘hidden’ in a lot of IT teachers desks, in my first year we would constantly forget our passwords so they'd whip it out and tell us.

Also, on most of the PCs you can just unplug the ethernet cable, log in with practically any username and password, once your on the PC just plug the ethernet cable back in to get internet access back and your own a temp account with alot less restrictions. I've never tried it, because they have CCTV so if they see some kid on the logs using a TEMP account messing with the PC they'll probably know who it was. Probably ain't illegal to unplug ethernet cables, but it might be against the schools policy.

Another thing is whenever they decide to randomly change up the layout of the site teachers and students use to track homework, all the assigned tasks get wiped so you have no idea what homework you have until all the teachers re-set the tasks.

Whenever you wanna print something off in most rooms with computers, you have to leave your desk and retrieve your paper before coming back and sitting down. This has caused multiple kids to get in trouble because people have searched inappropriate things on google on their account.

Sometimes they keep mark-schemes on the school's student ‘area’ (They're are student and teacher areas, of course the teacher one is locked off to students. Basically they are hard-drives where worksheets and resources are kept. You can only copy as a student in this area.)

For a long time people brought flash-games into school on thumb-drives, the fix they had was to just ban the flash file type they were using.

Most if not all monitors have weird resolutions, are way to bright or way to dark, have had their colours messed with as well.

Most PCs have had their disk drives ripped out because people kept putting food and other stuff in there.

Multiple PCs have been bricked because someone ripped or pushed in the power button too hard, breaking it.

We have the P drive and the L drive. The P drive effectively being your user directory and the L drive being a generic network drive. They also deleted all the source files of my game engine off of my USB.


really tho, did you put your engine files in any other place?
I had a backup of my engine, but that was a few changes ago. They didn't delete the compiled jar file though (I was doing it in java before) so I just decompiled it.
Smart! But not on your school drive?
Jonathan50
Scratcher
1000+ posts

School IT

bybb wrote:

We have the P drive and the L drive. The P drive effectively being your user directory and the L drive being a generic network drive. They also deleted all the source files of my game engine off of my USB.
Was that a personal USB drive or a school one?
happyland440
Scratcher
1000+ posts

School IT

Ex0gen wrote:

Also, on most of the PCs you can just unplug the ethernet cable, log in with practically any username and password, once your on the PC just plug the ethernet cable back in to get internet access back and your own a temp account with alot less restrictions. I've never tried it, because they have CCTV so if they see some kid on the logs using a TEMP account messing with the PC they'll probably know who it was. Probably ain't illegal to unplug ethernet cables, but it might be against the schools policy.

Really? I don't know if that would even work (and I don't want to find out).

By the way, our school's blocker is so smart it can block things through iframes and embeds, and even through my own browser
herohamp
Scratcher
1000+ posts

School IT

happyland440 wrote:

Ex0gen wrote:

Also, on most of the PCs you can just unplug the ethernet cable, log in with practically any username and password, once your on the PC just plug the ethernet cable back in to get internet access back and your own a temp account with alot less restrictions. I've never tried it, because they have CCTV so if they see some kid on the logs using a TEMP account messing with the PC they'll probably know who it was. Probably ain't illegal to unplug ethernet cables, but it might be against the schools policy.

Really? I don't know if that would even work (and I don't want to find out).

By the way, our school's blocker is so smart it can block things through iframes and embeds, and even through my own browser
I just use my vnc vpn ;P I bring my pi to school have it proxy a connection then use novnc to control it. My school disables vpn setting on the chromebooks so this is my only opition
DatOneLefty
Scratcher
1000+ posts

School IT

herohamp wrote:

happyland440 wrote:

Ex0gen wrote:

Also, on most of the PCs you can just unplug the ethernet cable, log in with practically any username and password, once your on the PC just plug the ethernet cable back in to get internet access back and your own a temp account with alot less restrictions. I've never tried it, because they have CCTV so if they see some kid on the logs using a TEMP account messing with the PC they'll probably know who it was. Probably ain't illegal to unplug ethernet cables, but it might be against the schools policy.

Really? I don't know if that would even work (and I don't want to find out).

By the way, our school's blocker is so smart it can block things through iframes and embeds, and even through my own browser
I just use my vnc vpn ;P I bring my pi to school have it proxy a connection then use novnc to control it. My school disables vpn setting on the chromebooks so this is my only opition
my school's firewall blocks many things (not brownie.cf!) but so many students just use HotSpot Shield, I just use google data saver proxy and i can still get past it lel
bybb
Scratcher
1000+ posts

School IT

Jonathan50 wrote:

bybb wrote:

We have the P drive and the L drive. The P drive effectively being your user directory and the L drive being a generic network drive. They also deleted all the source files of my game engine off of my USB.
Was that a personal USB drive or a school one?
Personal USB. I made the mistake of using it on a computer with internet.
Sigton
Scratcher
1000+ posts

School IT

bybb wrote:

Personal USB. I made the mistake of using it on a computer with internet.
Was it an automatic thing or did a teacher come over and delete the files themselves?

Sigton
DatOneLefty
Scratcher
1000+ posts

School IT

Sigton wrote:

bybb wrote:

Personal USB. I made the mistake of using it on a computer with internet.
Was it an automatic thing or did a teacher come over and delete the files themselves?

Sigton
or was it deleted by a teacher through the network?
Sigton
Scratcher
1000+ posts

School IT

I love the download speed of 50KB/s at school…

Sigton
DatOneLefty
Scratcher
1000+ posts

School IT

Sigton wrote:

I love the download speed of 50KB/s at school…

Sigton
lelelelelelelelel this is my school's result

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