Difference between revisions of "Brian Cox"

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[[Nick Short|Nick Short]]
 
[[Nick Short|Nick Short]]
  
[http://w01.rvcwiki.wf.ulcc.ac.uk/webpage/idea.html|Mindmap with links]
+
[http://w01.rvcwiki.wf.ulcc.ac.uk/webpage/idea.html Mindmap with links]
  
 
==Day one thoughts==
 
==Day one thoughts==

Revision as of 14:19, 9 August 2007

About me

My name is Brian Cox, I work at the RVC in the eMedia Department.

My role in the team is mainly to create

Brian at the beach

eMail Brian

<meta name="keywords" content="ListOfKeywords" /> Pathology

What I hope to get out of this project

I hope to be able to make this a project that will grow in all our vet schools

My best learning experience

Learning to ride a bike
and why it was good
when i fell of it hurt, so it made me work harder

Pathology that interests me

sheep's heads with worms in

Pathology that I think is difficult

Brian's mind is small

File:Mindmap.pdf

left: This is an example of how my mind is not working very well. I blame my parents for locking in the cupboard under the stairs and feeding me pins and lies.

most of it

File:Pot0013.mp4

Example of sheep's head and worm

Nick Short

Mindmap with links

Day one thoughts

What (three things) I learnt today

  1. What kind of person I am
  2. I know less about media wiki
  3. cmap tools

What I still need to learn

How to use mediawiki

How I feel about what has happened today

Very happy, I just hope that this all works out.

good luck everyone :)

This is an example of multiple references to the same footnote.[1]

Such references are particularly useful when citing sources, if different statements come from the same source.[1]

A concise way to make multiple references is to use empty ref tags, which have a slash at the end. Although this may reduce redundant work, please be aware that if a future editor removes the first reference, this will result in the loss of all references using the empty ref tags.[1]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Remember that when you refer to the same footnote multiple times, the text from the first reference is used. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "multiple" defined multiple times with different content