Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Facebook Tool Created By B.C. Teen To Plan Homework Gains Popularity Overseas

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Mar, 2017 01:53 PM
    A Facebook tool that helps students be more productive and keep track of assignments developed by a Victoria teen has gone viral in an unexpected place.
     
    Alec Jones, 14, says his chatbot, Christopher Bot, that helps students stay on top of their homework has garnered more than 3,000 subscribers, with many of them based in Thailand.
     
    Chatbots are automated software programs, which Jones compares to iPhone's Siri, that respond to users in a conversational manner. The bot that Jones developed works through Facebook's Messenger platform.
     
    For students who forget to write down their assignments or deadlines when they are handed out or struggle to keep track of it all, Christopher Bot is designed to do the remembering for them.
     
    Once a user subscribes to Christopher Bot, all they need to do is input their course schedule. The bot then sends a message to them near the end of each class asking whether they've been assigned homework. It also responds with sympathizing messages of "that sucks more than a vacuum" when the answer is yes. 
     
    Later, the bot reminds the user about their assignments.
     
    Jones said he had the idea after forgetting to bring books or schoolwork home with him. When he went to school early sometimes to catch up on homework he had missed, Jones said he noticed his friends were having similar problems.
     
    "The thing with calendars or agendas or to-do lists is that at the end of the day you always have to remember to put that information in," he said, adding that those tools are easily forgotten in lockers.
     
    But your phone is always in your pocket.
     
    "With the bot, it texts you first. You don't have to remember to write it in, it asks you."
     
    He said he first considered designing a smartphone app, but with only having experience in building websites, the technology for app development was a bit out of his reach.
     
     
    "I looked up what would be the closest thing I could do (to an app) and I heard about bots, and I thought it would be an interesting platform to build on," he said. 
     
    Everything about building a bot was also new to him, and Jones said he spent a lot of time reading articles and documents to figure it out.
     
    A spokesperson for Facebook said the company doesn't typically see 14-year-olds developing bots on their platform, and called Jones's endeavour "an incredible achievement."
     
    When he launched the bot in February, Jones said he hoped a few hundred people would sign up.
     
    He created a profile for the bot on a tech product website to help promote it. Jones said someone from Thailand came across the profile, tried out the bot and shared the post on Facebook.
     
    That Facebook post received over 11,000 likes, 3,800 shares and 300 comments, all of which were written in Thai. A spike in subscribers to the bot ensued.
     
    "I never expected that so many people would be signing up," Jones said.
     
    While Jones said he sees endless potential uses for technology, he hasn't had any new ideas yet and is focusing his efforts on managing Christopher Bot for now.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    3D-printed mouthpiece can prevent snoring

    3D-printed mouthpiece can prevent snoring
    Not been able to get good night's sleep owing to snoring or sleep apnea? This 3D 'duckbill' device can prevent dangerous pauses in breath during sleep and stops snoring.

    3D-printed mouthpiece can prevent snoring

    Soon, shirts to power wearable devices?

    Soon, shirts to power wearable devices?
    Your clothes could soon turn into devices that could power your medical monitors, communications equipment or other small electronics as researchers have now come closer to making a fiber-like energy storage device that could be woven into clothing.

    Soon, shirts to power wearable devices?

    Now, direct your dreams with electric current!

    Now, direct your dreams with electric current!
    Do nightmares often wake you up in the middle of the night or make you sweat even during the winter?

    Now, direct your dreams with electric current!

    Robotic arm that can catch flying objects

    Robotic arm that can catch flying objects
    With its palm open, this robot is completely motionless. A split second later, it suddenly unwinds and catches all sorts of flying objects thrown in its direction - a tennis racket, a ball, a bottle and so on.

    Robotic arm that can catch flying objects

    Is the pdf near its end?

    Is the pdf near its end?
    You download it often to read academic paper, research note, even a profile of your favourite candidate on your smart phone or tablet.

    Is the pdf near its end?

    Samsung president 'stable' after heart attack

    Samsung president 'stable' after heart attack
    Samsung Electronics President Lee Kun-hee is recovering in a hospital after suffering a heart attack this weekend, the Samsung Group said Monday.

    Samsung president 'stable' after heart attack