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- From: pollock@milton.u.washington.edu (Joe Pollock)
- Newsgroups: comp.admin.policy
- Subject: Re: Should Alums have access to school accounts?
- Message-ID: <1992Sep8.202739.16429@u.washington.edu>
- Date: 8 Sep 92 20:27:39 GMT
- Article-I.D.: u.1992Sep8.202739.16429
- References: <1992Sep2.185210.17665@orlith.bates.edu> <1992Sep4.024411.14002@news.iastate.edu> <1992Sep7.034047.19123@newstand.syr.edu>
- Sender: news@u.washington.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: The Evergreen State College
- Lines: 36
-
- As we prepare to get on the internet, we are considering also considering
- the issue of alum access. The alumni association wishes to keep in contact
- with as many individuals as possible, and is attempting to find out how many
- of our alumni have some form of e-mail access, and how many would use it for
- contacts.
-
- Our previous system was a Data General MV/10000, and we did provide limited
- resources to alums. Accounts were limited with respect to disk space, and
- ran at a lower priority than regular student accounts. Major concerns were
- commercial usage - strictly prohibited by state regulations - and
- recreational usage (games :-) interfering with academic usage. Since the
- machine was not connected to external networks, it had few other attractions.
-
- The solution was not entirely satisfactory, and few people used it on a
- regular basis. One interesting item - people who had used the previous
- computer system (an HP-2000) did not transition well to the DG. This is
- most likely a common problem - supporting remote users who rarely, if ever,
- come into the computer center, when major system changes occur.
-
- I'm a bit envious of those of you who say "Give the Alumni Association
- a spare workstation." At this time, we have one workstation for our
- Internet connection, and several AT&T 3B2's for DOS networking and UNIX
- classroom support. Quite frankly, the UNIX environment has not been
- particularly popular here, in a liberal arts environment, and it's
- difficult to generate support for resources used by a very small fraction
- of the community.
-
- My personal inclination is to observe resource utilization for a quarter
- or two, and then offer alum access. I expect this to require a bit of
- a selling job with management :-)
-
- Has anyone had any really negative experiences, or problems, such as
- administrative overhead, support headaches, etc.?
-
- Joe Pollock The Evergreen State College, Olympia, WA
- pollock@u.washington.edu
-