Hi, Chuck here. I'm in Zagreb, Croatia. And here we are at another instance of an Office Hours. The extended edition. Tell us your name. >> Hi, I'm Marco. >> Tell me what are you doing in education right now? What degree are you pursuing? >> I'm studying faculty of electrical engineering and computing at University of Zagreb, and I am graduate student. >> And so how many Coursera classes have you taken? >> I've taken two courses, yours and Introduction to Python. >> Why do you use Coursera? Why do you add in Coursera to you education? >> Because first of all I want to broaden my knowledge. >> And after all, some, how do you say? To show something in my CV that I have taken other courses than studying at a faculty. >> Do you have any suggestions for improvements? Or what would you say if you were talking to the people who ran Coursera? >> Just make it faster. >> Make it faster? >> Yeah. >> Okay. So, tell me your name. >> My name is Anamaria Cudanar. I'm student of philosophy and social humanistic informatics, graduate and undergraduate. What was the question? [LAUGH] >> So tell me about how many Coursera courses have you taken? >> I've taken four, Guide to Irrational Behavior, How to reason and argue, and human computer interaction. And the fourth one was artificial intelligence at Stanford. >> Did you finish them all? >> No, I finished only one. And I got a certificate from how to reason and argue. So how do you fit it in with the rest of your education, I mean how does it fit, and what part of your education does Coursera fulfill? >> The things that I learned are outside of my study scope, I'm really interesting in a lot of things and I think that people should be more prone to interdisciplinary, >> So I want to learn things from other places, and I think that makes me more valuable at the market, and I'm really genuinely interested in a lot of things. >> So is there anything that worries you about Coursera, does it bother you, or do you have some fears about the future? Or do you think it's like >> Fears? I fear that it will become, when money gets involved, it will no longer probably able to be open-source because somebody has to pay it, and I think it's only a matter of time when it will get, somebody will have to pay for it. So, I'm afraid that it will no longer be available to a lot of people. >> Okay. Do you have anything you would say, to suggest to improve it? That you're a professional and sort of learning technology. Do you have any suggestions? >> Just make it fun. Like you or Don already does. >> Okay. >> Okay, so. >> So there you have it, the voice of the student from downtown Zagreb, and we'll talk to you next time.