Monday, January 16, 2023

Snow leopard (Panthera uncia): Recording of Monday, 1/16/23 open World Univ & Sch WUaS News and Q&A - with Tilak Rana MAGAR in the 2nd video from today! * Nepal World Univ & Sch student Tilak Rana Magar & 'CS First with Google at WUaS' Scratch programming course * WUaS Home Robotics


Nepal World Univ & Sch student Tilak Rana Magar & 'CS First with Google at WUaS' Scratch programming course * WUaS Home Robotics 


https://www.youtube.com/ScottMacLeodWorldUniversity 




*


Some related Tweets - 


#Nepal @WorldUnivAndSch student #TilakRanaMagar & '#CSFirst #withGoogle at WUaS' LIVE course * #WUaSHomeRobotics https://youtu.be/VnKFgceOLTE
M 1/16/23 Video 2 > https://www.youtube.com/@ScottMacLeodWorldUniversity/videos (https://www.youtube.com/ScottMacLeodWorldUniversity) > https://wiki.worlduniversityandschool.org/wiki/Nepal in https://wiki.worlduniversityandschool.org/wiki/Nepali planned in #Nepali ~


https://twitter.com/WorldUnivAndSch/status/1615027038749851668?s=20&t=cUz9Fs31_GTswt_vRKdm7Q

https://twitter.com/WUaSPress/status/1615031022608842753

https://twitter.com/sgkmacleod/status/1615028540147367941

https://twitter.com/TheOpenBand/status/1615029031128424448

https://twitter.com/HarbinBook/status/1615029393193041935

https://twitter.com/scottmacleod/status/1615030298365788181




MON, 1/16/23 open @WorldUnivAndSch @WUaSPress News & Q&A RECORDING
https://youtu.be/1r7iAWT95mA New YouTube URL
https://www.youtube.com/@ScottMacLeodWorldUniversity/videos & more abt how to matriculate into CC4 OCW.MIT.EDU -centric #WikiWUaS for #FreeUniversityDegrees FROM HOME -
https://www.youtube.com/@ScottMacLeodWorldUniversity/about!


https://twitter.com/WorldUnivAndSch/status/1615010928180723715?s=20&t=cUz9Fs31_GTswt_vRKdm7Q

https://twitter.com/sgkmacleod/status/1615028423579009030

https://twitter.com/TheOpenBand/status/1615028909862715392


https://twitter.com/HarbinBook/status/1615029593211011082

https://twitter.com/WUaSPress/status/1615029935764013066

https://twitter.com/scottmacleod/status/1615030633599844352



* *  

Welcome Tilak Rana Magar (in Nepal), and World Universitians,

Greetings!

Tilak, how is the "CS First with Google at World Univ & Sch" programming course going for you - https://csfirst.withgoogle.com/s/en/home - and as you complete this course to matriculate into MIT OCW-centric World University and School for a free 4-year WUaS Bachelor's degree. (Mwende Evande in Cameroon Africa above has completed the "CS Frist With Google at WUaS" course this spring, if you would like to communicate about this).
 
Glad you're going to join the WUaS News and Q&A tomorrow at this time in about 24 hours. Here's the URL

Topic: Monday, 1/16/23 open World Univ & Sch WUaS News and Q&A
Time: Jan 16, 2023 8:00 PM Nepal Time (but please double check this Nepal time, based on) 10:00 AM  Eastern Time, 07:00 AM Pacific Time (US and Canada)

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us04web.zoom.us/j/75616968061?pwd=lWjKR7bgKZtu12UeYs5NGx8RqO5nQN.1

Meeting ID: 756 1696 8061
Passcode: w8KHyk

This is a World University and School community for you - with almost everyone else in this email thread being Wiki-Universitians, who can openly teach and learn here - https://wiki.worlduniversityandschool.org/wiki/Subjects - about anything. 


All the best, 
Scott

The 1/16/23 WUaS News and Q&A will be posted here for people who can't join this live tomorrow - 

And more about how to matriculate into MIT OCW-centric Wiki World Univ & Sch for free online university degrees here - 



Upcoming online World Univ & Sch open Meetings - 

1
Topic: Monday, 1/16/23 open World Univ & Sch WUaS News and Q&A
Time: Jan 16, 2023 8:00 PM Nepal Time 10:00 AM  Eastern Time, 07:00 AM Pacific Time (US and Canada)

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us04web.zoom.us/j/75616968061?pwd=lWjKR7bgKZtu12UeYs5NGx8RqO5nQN.1

Meeting ID: 756 1696 8061
Passcode: w8KHyk




2
Topic: Sat. 1\21\23 open World Univ & Sch WUaS Monthly Business Meeting
Time: Jan 21, 2023 09:00 AM Pacific Time (US and Canada)

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us04web.zoom.us/j/76137474059?pwd=Y7HX3gHauxj3RTM1BWhbCbGwoETXxK.1

Meeting ID: 761 3747 4059
Passcode: 8NJC1L



3
Topic: Monday, 1/23/23 open World Univ & Sch WUaS News and Q&A
Time: Jan 23, 2023 07:00 AM Pacific Time (US and Canada)

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us04web.zoom.us/j/74962323448?pwd=cMklRISTJNiF3eRWKTV9XWEJzLcf4F.1

Meeting ID: 749 6232 3448
Passcode: x2Q6mB






--


-- Poetry! Order Book #5 Light, Float, Sit, Watsu ~ Virtually

Scottish Small Piping album #1 Honey in the Bag ~ Out of the Air tune




Order Actual-Virtual Ethnographic Book #1: Naked Harbin Ethnography 



- Scott GK MacLeod  
Founder, President, CEO & Professor
CC-4 licensed MIT OCW-centric. Wiki, 
World University & School (WUaS) 
- PO Box 442, Canyon, CA 94516 
- 210 East End Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15221
1) non-profit World University and School - http://worlduniversityandschool.org  
2) for profit general stock company WUaS Corporation in CA - http://worlduniversityandschool.org/AcademicPress.html

(m) 412 478 0116 - sgkmacleod@gmail.com 

World Univ & Sch Innovation Research -  scottmacleod.com 



Tilak Rana Magar

Sun, Jan 15, 2:18 PM (1 day ago)
to me

Hi Scott,

Thank you for reaching out and inquiring about my progress with the "CS First with Google at World Univ & Sch" programming course. It is going well so far and I am enjoying the learning experience. I am excited to complete the course and matriculate into MIT OCW-centric World University and School for a free 4-year WUaS Bachelor's degree. I would be happy to communicate with Mwende Evande in Cameroon Africa about her experience with the "CS Frist With Google at WUaS" course this spring. Please let me know how to best do so.

Best, Tilak



*  

Dear Tilak (in Nepal), and Mwende (in Cameroon, Africa), (David and Peter (a head of Google AI), both computer scientists, the fields you both want to get free bachelor degrees in - but David Byrne, while brilliant and a Yale alumnus, doesn't know machine learning that much,  since he graduated from Yale with an undergraduate degree in CS in the early-mid 1980s, and Peter may not have written his key book on AI and machine learning, at the time either), 


I'd like to introduce you to one another here. I haven't heard from Mwende ('Volcano') whatsoever in a long time ... so please take the time to communicate with one another (and us if helpful) ... and perhaps you can enter a first year WUaS bachelor degrees' cohort this September 1, 2023 ... as WUaS seeks to develop the equivalent of 3-4 first year undergraduate classes from CC-4 licensed OCW.MIT.EDU ... and building from the CC4 licensed "CS First with Google at World Univ & Sch" programming course. 

WUaS continues to seek to develop a Hum 101 Humanities' course, required for first year undergraduates for 2-3 semesters/terms, and newly for the web, with much writing, critical thinking, and including the origins of philosophy, and knowledge generation esp. 

Mwende, have you made a scratch.mit.edu site that you might share with Tilak? 

Please let me know if I can facilitate further introductions, or ways to communicate - possibly through programming and social media.

Cheers, 
Scott

Regarding both of your growing knowledge of Scratch, please see Tweet number 4 (in the context of the other sets of Tweets here) regarding a possible new way of learning coding with Scratch and regarding Longevity questions, biology, cell biology and molecular biology (Peter?) --





* * * 

Old mice grow young again in study. T ... Can people do the same? 1/13/23 - Twitter ...

1
Old mice grow young again in study. Can people do the same? 1/13/23
https://www.cnn.com/2023/01/12/health/reversing-aging-scn-wellness/index.html The ‘Benjamin Button’ effect: Scientists can reverse aging in mice. 7/15/22 These mice are brother and sister, born from the same litter. One has been genetically
https://www.cnn.com/2022/06/02/health/reverse-aging-life-itself-scn-wellness/index.html ~

https://twitter.com/scottmacleod/status/1614586600293277698

https://twitter.com/HarbinBook/status/1614589470606499840?s=20&t=iHbMtb-0tppsyuOfJNUyig

https://twitter.com/WorldUnivAndSch/status/1614589168763506688?s=20&t=iHbMtb-0tppsyuOfJNUyig

https://twitter.com/WUaSPress/status/1614589249269157892?s=20&t=iHbMtb-0tppsyuOfJNUyig

https://twitter.com/sgkmacleod/status/1614589572758781952?s=20&t=iHbMtb-0tppsyuOfJNUyig

https://twitter.com/TheOpenBand/status/1614589366420004864?s=20&t=iHbMtb-0tppsyuOfJNUyig




*
2
#VirenJain #PeterNorvig @geochurch If I were to #DragDrop these 2 pics https://www.cnn.com/2022/06/02/health/reverse-aging-life-itself-scn-wellness/index.html > #Pegman as #MouseSpecies' #AvatarBots per @stardazed0's PIC, in #StreetView w #TimeSlider @ cell & molecule levels in his #TensorStore cube in #RealisticVirtualEarthForGenetics, next?










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Drag & drop these 2 pics onto #Pegman #MouseSpecies' #AvatarBot #StreetView w #TimeSlider >#RealisticVirtualEarthForGenetics
These mice are brother and sister, born from the same litter. One has been genetically altered to be old












*
4
?#ScratchProgramming of #CellBiology & #MolecularBiology >Biology https://scratch.mit.edu/studios/243211 >Biology Simulations 
https://scratch.mit.edu/studios/1242004 >Scratch: Interactive Labeled Diagram (Cells) - L1 












5
#HomeBrewClub #HomeGeneClub? Pulled out "Is there a limit to human life?" 12/2022 issue #MITTechReview @antonioregalado #VirenJain #PeterNorvig @geochurch in this #TensorStoreCube in #PhysicalDigital #RealisticVirtualEarthForGenetics How to #3DAdd 2 pics https://www.cnn.com/2022/06/02/health/reverse-aging-life-itself-scn-wellness/index.html?








*
5a
#HomeBrewClub #HomeGeneClub? Pulled out "Is there a limit to human life?" 12/2022 issue #MITTechReview @antonioregalado #PhysicalDigital #VirenJain #PeterNorvig @geochurch in this #TensorStoreCube in #RealisticVirtualEarthForGenetics How to #3DAdd 2 pics https://www.cnn.com/2022/06/02/health/reverse-aging-life-itself-scn-wellness/index.html?






* * * 

Old mice grow young again in study. Can people do the same? 1/13/23 - CNN


Old mice grow young again in study. Can people do the same?
By Sandee LaMotte, CNN
Updated 5:47 AM EST, Fri January 13, 2023







The ‘Benjamin Button’ effect: Scientists can reverse aging in mice. The goal is to do the same for humans
By Sandee LaMotte, CNN
Updated 3:22 PM EDT, Fri July 15, 2022
These mice are brother and sister, born from the same litter. One has been genetically altered to be old. Now scientists say they have been able to reverse aging as well.
These mice are brother and sister, born from the same litter. One has been genetically altered to be old. Now scientists say they have been able to reverse aging as well



These mice are brother and sister, born from the same litter. One has been genetically altered to be old. Now scientists say they have been able to reverse aging as well.
These mice are brother and sister, born from the same litter. One has been genetically altered to be old. Now scientists say they have been able to reverse aging as well.
David Sinclair

The ‘Benjamin Button’ effect: Scientists can reverse aging in mice. The goal is to do the same for humans

By Sandee LaMotte, CNN
Updated 3:22 PM EDT, Fri July 15, 2022
CNN — 

In molecular biologist David Sinclair’s lab at Harvard Medical School, old mice are growing young again.

Using proteins that can turn an adult cell into a stem cell, Sinclair and his team have reset aging cells in mice to earlier versions of themselves. In his team’s first breakthrough, published in late 2020, old mice with poor eyesight and damaged retinas could suddenly see again, with vision that at times rivaled their offspring’s.

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David Sinclair has reversed aging in mice  and believes the same can be done for people.
David Sinclair has reversed aging in mice and believes the same can be done for people.

“It’s a permanent reset, as far as we can tell, and we think it may be a universal process that could be applied across the body to reset our age,” said Sinclair, who has spent the last 20 years studying ways to reverse the ravages of time.

“If we reverse aging, these diseases should not happen. We have the technology today to be able to go into your hundreds without worrying about getting cancer in your 70s, heart disease in your 80s and Alzheimer’s in your 90s.” Sinclair told an audience at Life Itself, a health and wellness event presented in partnership with CNN.

“This is the world that is coming. It’s literally a question of when and for most of us, it’s going to happen in our lifetimes,” Sinclair told the audience.

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Can we cure aging?
04:31 - Source: CNN

“His research shows you can change aging to make lives younger for longer. Now he wants to change the world and make aging a disease,” said Whitney Casey, an investor who is partnering with Sinclair to create a do-it-yourself biological age test.

While modern medicine addresses sickness, it doesn’t address the underlying cause, “which for most diseases, is aging itself,” Sinclair said. “We know that when we reverse the age of an organ like the brain in a mouse, the diseases of aging then go away. Memory comes back; there is no more dementia.

“I believe that in the future, delaying and reversing aging will be the best way to treat the diseases that plague most of us.”

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A reset button

In Sinclair’s lab, two mice sit side by side. One is the picture of youth, the other gray and feeble. Yet they are brother and sister, born from the same litter – only one has been genetically altered to age faster.

If that could be done, Sinclair asked his team, could the reverse be accomplished as well? Japanese biomedical researcher Dr. Shinya Yamanaka had already reprogrammed human adult skin cells to behave like embryonic or pluripotent stem cells, capable of developing into any cell in the body. The 2007 discovery won the scientist a Nobel Prize, and his “induced pluripotent stem cells,” soon became known as “Yamanaka factors.”

However, adult cells fully switched back to stem cells via Yamanaka factors lose their identity. They forget they are blood, heart and skin cells, making them perfect for rebirth as “cell du jour,” but lousy at rejuvenation. You don’t want Brad Pitt in “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button” to become a baby all at once; you want him to age backward while still remembering who he is.

Labs around the world jumped on the problem. A study published in 2016 by researchers at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, California, showed signs of aging could be expunged in genetically aged mice, exposed for a short time to four main Yamanaka factors, without erasing the cells’ identity.

But there was a downside in all this research: In certain situations, the altered mice developed cancerous tumors.

Looking for a safer alternative, Sinclair lab geneticist Yuancheng Lu chose three of the four factors and genetically added them to a harmless virus. The virus was designed to deliver the rejuvenating Yamanaka factors to damaged retinal ganglion cells at the back of an aged mouse’s eye. After injecting the virus into the eye, the pluripotent genes were then switched on by feeding the mouse an antibiotic.

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“The antibiotic is just a tool. It could be any chemical really, just a way to be sure the three genes are switched on,” Sinclair said. “Normally they are only on in very young developing embryos and then turn off as we age.”

Amazingly, damaged neurons in the eyes of mice injected with the three cells rejuvenated, even growing new axons, or projections from the eye into the brain. Since that original study, Sinclair said his lab has reversed aging in the muscles and brains of mice and is now working on rejuvenating a mouse’s entire body.

“Somehow the cells know the body can reset itself, and they still know which genes should be on when they were young,” Sinclair said. “We think we’re tapping into an ancient regeneration system that some animals use – when you cut the limb off a salamander, it regrows the limb. The tail of a fish will grow back; a finger of a mouse will grow back.”

That discovery indicates there is a “backup copy” of youthfulness information stored in the body, he added.

“I call it the information theory of aging,” he said. “It’s a loss of information that drives aging cells to forget how to function, to forget what type of cell they are. And now we can tap into a reset switch that restores the cell’s ability to read the genome correctly again, as if it was young.”

While the changes have lasted for months in mice, renewed cells don’t freeze in time and never age (like, say, vampires or superheroes), Sinclair said. “It’s as permanent as aging is. It’s a reset, and then we see the mice age out again, so then we just repeat the process.

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“We believe we have found the master control switch, a way to rewind the clock,” he added. “The body will then wake up, remember how to behave, remember how to regenerate and will be young again, even if you’re already old and have an illness.”

Science already knows how to slow human aging

Studies on whether the genetic intervention that revitalized mice will do the same for people are in early stages, Sinclair said. It will be years before human trials are finished, analyzed and, if safe and successful, scaled to the mass needed for a federal stamp of approval.

While we wait for science to determine if we too can reset our genes, there are many other ways to slow the aging process and reset our biological clocks, Sinclair said.

“The top tips are simply: Focus on plants for food, eat less often, get sufficient sleep, lose your breath for 10 minutes three times a week by exercising to maintain your muscle mass, don’t sweat the small stuff and have a good social group,” Sinclair said.

All these behaviors affect our epigenome, proteins and chemicals that sit like freckles on each gene, waiting to tell the gene “what to do, where to do it, and when to do it,” according to the National Human Genome Research Institute. The epigenome literally turns genes on and off.

What controls the epigenome? Human behavior and one’s environment play a key role. Let’s say you were born with a genetic predisposition for heart disease and diabetes. But because you exercised, ate a plant-focused diet, slept well and managed your stress during most of your life, it’s possible those genes would never be activated. That, experts say, is how we can take some of our genetic fate into our own hands.

The positive impact on our health from eating a plant-based diet, having close, loving relationships and getting adequate exercise and sleep are well documented. Calorie restriction, however, is a more controversial way of adding years to life, experts say.

Cutting back on food – without inducing malnutrition – has been a scientifically known way to lengthen life for nearly a century. Studies on worms, crabs, snails, fruit flies and rodents have found restricting calories “delay the onset of age-related disorders” such as cancer, heart disease and diabetes, according to the National Institute on Aging. Some studies have also found extensions in life span: In a 1986 study, mice fed only a third of a typical day’s calories lived to 53 months – a mouse kept as a pet may live to about 24 months.

Studies in people, however, have been less enlightening, partly because many have focused on weight loss instead of longevity. For Sinclair, however, cutting back on meals was a significant factor in resetting his personal clock: Recent tests show he has a biological age of 42 in a body born 53 years ago.

“I’ve been doing a biological test for 10 years now, and I’ve been getting steadily younger for the last decade,” Sinclair said. “The biggest change in my biological clock occurred when I ate less often – I only eat one meal a day now. That made the biggest difference to my biochemistry.”

Additional ways to turn back the clock

Sinclair incorporates other tools into his life, based on research from his lab and others. In his book “Lifespan: Why We Age and Why We Don’t Have To,” he writes that little of what he does has undergone the sort of “rigorous long-term clinical testing” needed to have a “complete understanding of the wide range of potential outcomes.” In fact, he added, “I have no idea if this is even the right thing for me to be doing.”

With that caveat, Sinclair is willing to share his tips: He keeps his starches and sugars to a minimum and gave up desserts at age 40 (although he does admit to stealing a taste on occasion). He eats a good amount of plants, avoids eating other mammals and keeps his body weight at the low end of optimal.

He exercises by taking a lot of steps each day, walks upstairs instead of taking an elevator and visits the gym with his son to lift weights and jog before taking a sauna and a dip in an ice-cold pool. “I’ve got my 20-year-old body back,” he said with a smile.

Speaking of cold, science has long thought lower temperatures increased longevity in many species, but whether it is true or not may come down to one’s genome, according to a 2018 study. Regardless, it appears cold can increase brown fat in humans, which is the type of fat bears use to stay warm during hibernation. Brown fat has been shown to improve metabolism and combat obesity.

Sinclair takes vitamins D and K2 and baby aspirin daily, along with supplements that have shown promise in extending longevity in yeast, mice and human cells in test tubes.

One supplement he takes after discovering its benefits is 1 gram of resveratrol, the antioxidant-like substance found in the skin of grapes, blueberries, raspberries, mulberries and peanuts.

He also takes 1 gram of metformin, a staple in the arsenal of drugs used to lower blood sugars in people with diabetes. He added it after studies showed it might reduce inflammation, oxidative damage and cellular senescence, in which cells are damaged but refuse to die, remaining in the body as a type of malfunctioning “zombie cell.”

However, some scientists quibble about the use of metformin, pointing to rare cases of lactic acid buildup and a lack of knowledge on how it functions in the body.

Sinclair also takes 1 gram of NMN, or nicotinamide mononucleotide, which in the body turns into NAD+, or nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide. A coenzyme that exists in all living cells, NAD+ plays a central role in the body’s biological processes, such as regulating cellular energy, increasing insulin sensitivity and reversing mitochondrial dysfunction.

When the body ages, NAD+ levels significantly decrease, dropping by middle age to about half the levels of youth, contributing to age-related metabolic diseases and neurodegenerative disorders. Numerous studies have shown restoring NAD+ levels safely improves overall health and increases life span in yeast, mice and dogs. Clinical trials testing the molecule in humans have been underway for three years, Sinclair said.

“These supplements, and the lifestyle that I am doing, is designed to turn on our defenses against aging,” he said. “Now, if you do that, you don’t necessarily turn back the clock. These are just things that slow down epigenetic damage and these other horrible hallmarks of aging.

“But the real advance, in my view, was the ability to just tell the body, ‘Forget all that. Just be young again,’ by just flipping a switch. Now I’m not saying that we’re going to all be 20 years old again,” Sinclair said.

“But I’m optimistic that we can duplicate this very fundamental process that exists in everything from a bat to a sheep to a whale to a human. We’ve done it in a mouse. There’s no reason I can think of why it shouldn’t work in a person, too.”







* *  

Tilak, MWENDE, 


Are you still planning to join the WUaS News and Q&A tomorrow, as you said you would? Mwende, would you to join too, since we haven't met face to face yet (believe it or not!) - 


1
Topic: Monday, 1/16/23 open World Univ & Sch WUaS News and Q&A
Time: Jan 16, 2023 8:00 PM Nepal Time, 4:00 PM Cameroon Time (BUT PLEASE CHECK BOTH OF THESE TIMES BASED ON) 10:00 AM  Eastern Time USA, 07:00 AM Pacific Time (US and Canada)

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us04web.zoom.us/j/75616968061?pwd=lWjKR7bgKZtu12UeYs5NGx8RqO5nQN.1

Meeting ID: 756 1696 8061
Passcode: w8KHyk

Mwende? Tilak? This would be a great opportunity for YOU TOO to meet ... especially if your going to be in the same COHORT at WUaS for the next 4 years for free online MIT OCW-centric Bachelor degrees! 

Cheers, best wishes,  

Scott  



Tilak Rana Magar

Sun, Jan 15, 2:39 PM (1 day ago)
to meTilakRanaMagarVOLCANOTayevangujohMwendeEvandeDavidPeter
Yes, I will be there. 



Scott MacLeod sgkmacleod@worlduniversityandschool.org

Sun, Jan 15, 2:39 PM (1 day ago)
to TilakTilakRanaMagarVOLCANOTayevangujohMwendeEvandeDavidPeter
Great, thanks! 



* *

Tilak, 

It was great to talk with you today in Itahari, Nepal, from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania - ~7,700 miles away (via flight over Europe)! Looking forward to a LIVE "CS First With Google at World Unv & Sch" class, building on - https://csfirst.withgoogle.com/s/en/home - in Zoom next Monday at 10am Eastern Time thanks to your great question.

Regarding Scratch language in Nepali, and Computer Science and other related careers at WUaS building MIT OCW-centric Nepal World University and School : 

1
It turns out - 

The Scratch for CS First coding editor is currently available in six languages: English, French, German, Italian, European Spanish and Japanese.

I AM NOT SEEING NEPALI here.


2
It looks like it's possible to add - https://csfirst.withgoogle.com/s/en/home -

How do I link CS first to Google classroom?
To connect CS First with your Google Classroom account, first you must connect the two accounts.
Sign in to CS First as a teacher. ...
Navigate to your Profile.
Under Google Classroom, click Get Started.
Click Connect with Classroom.


to Google Classroom, but am not planning this presently 


3
Separately and for Scratch itself, I searched on  

'Scratch programming in what languages ?' 



4
Nepal World Univ & Sch student Tilak Rana Magar & 'CS First with Google at WUaS' Scratch programming course * WUaS Home Robotics




Some related Tweets - 



4b


5
Let's talk about the first 4 "CS First With Google at WUaS' Scratch lessons next week?


... and could you please create a - https://scratch.mit.edu/ - account for next week too? 
and here's a video about this - https://youtu.be/se8di8cBj70

(Here are my two - 
Thanks for your great English, Tilak, and I hope you enjoy MIT OCW-centric wiki World Univ & Sch - http://worlduniversityandschool.org/ ... https://twitter.com/WorldUnivAndSch 

Cheers, 
Scott

Again, 

Am posting our communications about this and the videos too here in my
M Jan 16, 2023 daily blog post, this one with Snow Leopard pictures too - 







































...


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