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Technology Reference Guide

Added by Kate Krolicki , last edited by Tamra Hjermstad on Oct 19, 2009  (view change)
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What is this Guide for?

Welcome to the Technology Reference Guide, published by the Office for Information Technology (OIT). This guide contains an overview of the computing services and resources available to the Williams community as well as a set of information guides on various computing topics, and provides an introduction to the information technology environment on the Williams campus.

Table of Contents

Services & Resources

Quick Guides

Computing Policies

Services & Resources

Faculty/Staff Support Desk x4090

This Support Desk is the primary contact for faculty and staff technology questions. There are several people dedicated to answering the phones, but somtimes all lines are in use. If your call is not immediately answered, you may remain in a holding queue for the next available specialist, leave a voice-mail message, stop by the support desk at Jesup 210, or email Desktop Systems at desktop@williams.edu.

Academic hours: 8:00 am - 5:00 pm, Monday - Friday
Summer hours: 8:30 am - 5:00 pm, Monday - Friday

The help desk is closed but available to receive messages from 12:15 pm to 12:30 pm. For weekend and after-hours help, call the Student Support Desk (x3088), email stchelp@williams.edu, or email desktop@williams.edu. Although OIT can't guarantee a response off-hours, it's likely that an STC or Desktop Systems Specialist will read the email and offer help.

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Student Support Desk

The Student Support Desk is the primary contact for student technology questions. It is staffed by Student Technology Consultants (STCs). Visit them on the first floor of Jesup, or email stchelp@williams.edu.

Academic Year Hours:

10 am - Midnight, Monday - Thursday
10 am - 8 pm, Friday
Noon - 6 pm, Saturday
Noon - Midnight, Sunday

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Instructional Technology & Liaisons

Instructional Technology provides support for faculty interested in using technology in teaching and research. This includes:

If you have general questions about ITech services, please contact your department liaisons, email itech@williams.edu, or call Jonathan Leamon at x4468.

Department Liaisons

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Media Services x2112

Facilities include:

  • electronic classrooms
  • major presentation venues (such as Chapin Hall or Brooks-Rogers)

Services include:

  • training and consultation for using electronic classroom equipment
  • support for lectures and presentations by faculty and guest speakers
  • analog and digital video and audio format conversion and copying
  • videotaping major college events for academic or college use

Media Services hours when classes are in session:

8 am - 9 pm, Monday - Thursday
8 am - 5 pm, Friday

Media Services is located in Jesup 317 and provides presentation facilities and related support for academic work and extra-curricular events.

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Classrooms & Computer Labs

All registrar scheduled classrooms have a full set of presentation equipment, including a PC, a Mac, laptop connections, a CD/DVD/VHS player, audio system, and data projector. Some classrooms have slide projectors or document cameras, and most have transparency projectors. These rooms are scheduled by the Registrar's office through the drop/add period, and through the calendar office at calendar.williams.edu for the remainder of the semester.

Computer Labs, specialty labs, and collaboration stations are also available.

More on Classrooms & Labs

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Media Education Center & Production Studios

Media Education Center (MEC - Jesup 316)
Explore usage and creation of all types of media for learning and beyond. The MEC has support for flatbed & slide scanning, poster and color printing, audio, video & animation production, digital sending, copy-stand work, video conferencing, and more. It's the primary location for individual or small group training and support. The MEC is open weekdays, 9-5 with staffed "drop-in" support hours from 10 AM - noon and 2 -5 PM weekdays. Other hours or individual appointments can be made by contacting itech@williams.edu.

Additional OIT Supported Media Production or Collaborative Work Studios:

  • Jesup B03 - "The Cellar" - includes a large screen collaborative workstation
  • Jesup 101 - "The Aquarium" - student staffed evenings and weekends
  • Jesup 204 - includes a replica of the music dept recording/composing work station and Lynda.com dedicated self-training station
  • Spencer 216 (Art Studio Building)
  • Dodd Annex

Studios are configured to match production equipment in the MEC. Some spaces are reserveable for project work or collaborative meetings. Send queries to itech@williams.edu.

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Technology Training

OIT offers a wide variety of technology training:

  • Workshops, which include software training, web and media development, and programming
  • In-class training
  • One-on-one training
  • Online software training: Element K, and Lynda.com

IDeaL Initiative
Integrating Digital Literacies (IDL) with Media Mentors
OIT will provide Student Media Mentors to faculty for course-specific training and support of students undertaking multimedia projects as part of their regular course assignments. The media projects are designed to integrate research and content with digital literacy concepts including: information fluency, visual literacy, media scholarship and digital publishing. This initiative is in pilot phase for Fall '09. If you are interested in exploring the use of a Media Mentor for Spring '10 please contact your ITech liaison.

More on Technology Training

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Blackboard@Williams

Blackboard is a web-based course management system that is used for the majority of classes offered each semester at Williams. It provides easy-to-use templates and tools for faculty to put their course materials online. It also allows both synchronous and asynchronous online communication between faculty and students. Using Blackboard, Williams faculty can develop web-enhanced courses seamlessly and efficiently with no HTML knowledge.

Blackboard will be replaced by GLOW, Williams' new Course Management System, in the Fall of 2010. Detailed information regarding why we are replacing Blackboard is available here.

Blackboard FAQs

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Equipment Loan Center: x4091

Digital and analog equipment may be borrowed for academic or college use. Most equipment circulates for up to 3 days at a time. The Equipment Loan Center is located in Dodd Annex. We recommend making a reservation early, at least a few weeks in advance. The center can also be reached at eqloaning@williams.edu.

Academic hours: 9 am - Noon and 1 pm - 5 pm, Monday - Friday
Summer hours: 9 am - Noon, Monday - Friday

ELC Info & Policies
ELC Inventory

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Williams Students Online: WSO

Williams Students Online (WSO) is an independent student organization at Williams College that creatively supports the computing needs of the College community. WSO Services include personal and student-organization web sites, listservs, interactive web tools, and computer instruction.

WSO holds weekly meetings. Newcomers are welcome; there's always room for more programmers, publicity folk, graphic designers, or people willing to learn- no experience is necessary.

You can access the WSO web site at http://wso.williams.edu/.

Suggestions and questions concerning WSO should go to wso@wso.williams.edu. More specific contact addresses include:

  • listservers@wso.williams.edu - for questions about WSO listservs.
  • facebook@wso.williams.edu - for questions about the WSO facebook.

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Purchasing a Computer

You can check the minimum specifications and the current recommended models at http://oit.williams.edu/buycomputer/. Computers that don't meet minimum specifications will still receive Help Desk support, but they invariably take longer to configure or repair and we cannot guarantee network connectivity. Questions regarding computer purchases can be sent to firstyear.techinfo@williams.edu.

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Software

We strongly recommend that students purchase Microsoft Office (the Academic Standard version).

We are licensed to install Office (Word, Excel, Powerpoint, Outlook and Access) on home computers used for work by faculty and staff.

Anti-virus software is provided for all faculty, staff, and students. Keeping virus definition files up to date is required.

Other essential software may be downloaded from the Williams servers after connecting to the network. OIT provides a library of downloadable software available to current faculty, staff, and students for college related work.

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Quick Guides

Passwords & Accounts

A single user name and password are used for most computing services at Williams (email, wireless, printing, the wiki, network storage, etc.). Your desktop/laptop does not automatically use that same password, but it's possible to synchronize them. Meeting Maker and PeopleSoft do NOT use this password- OIT recommends that you use different one for these.

More Info on Accounts & Passwords
Password Changer

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Email

Williams provides emails addresses in the format: username@williams.edu and First.M.Last@williams.edu. All new user names are in the format initials + sequence number. For example, email sent to Ephraim.A.Williams@williams.edu and to eaw1@williams.edu go to the same account.

Email can be access from our webmail site or via desktop software (Thunderbird, Outlook, etc).

More Information on Email

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Viruses & Safe Computing

Virus Scanners
We have a virus scanner that automatically checks the emails going through our system. Other email accounts (like Hotmail or Yahoo) which you can access while on our network are not being scanned by our server. This means that if you open an attachment from an alternate account your computer can become infected. Also bear in mind that anti-virus definitions always come out AFTER a virus is introduced to the Internet. There may be a one or two day delay between the propagation of the virus and our ability to detect it.

If a known virus is detected in your Williams email, the virus scanner will delete it, preventing infection.

Faculty and staff computers provided by OIT come with virus scanners installed. Students should install the anti-virus software provided to them by OIT. A virus scanner is only as good as its definitions. Old virus definitions cannot adequately protect against the latest threats. Your virus scanner should automatically update when the computer is restarted. To update your Sophos Anti-Virus definitions manually, double-click the icon in the task bar that looks like a blue flower.

Safe Computing Practices
Following safe computing practices, along with an updated virus scanner, is your best defense:

  • Maintain up to date antivirus software and software definitions.
  • Scan all downloads and attachments for viruses before opening them.
  • Do not open any attachments you weren't expecting to receive.
  • If you don't want to delete it immediately, contact the sender to verify that the attachment is safe. Viruses "spoof" their return address. Even emails that appear to come from trusted colleagues and family members could contain viruses.
  • Don't download software from the Internet and run it unless you trust the source.
  • Beware of file sharing programs (Napster, BitTorrent, Gnutella, KaZaa, eMule, etc). The email virus scanner will not protect you from viruses obtained through those programs.
  • Do no open email messages from "administrator" or "admin." All official messages from OIT will have the subject line "OIT Eph Notice mm/dd/yy."

For general information about viruses and hoaxes, visit http://www.vmyths.com/.
More Info on Viruses

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Working From Off-Campus

You can use many of the computing services provided by Williams from off-campus. Email and MeetingMaker can be accessed via a web browser. You can run Keyserved applications like Photoshop or Dreamweaver from a Williams owned laptop using VPN (Virtual Private Network).

More on Working from Off-Campus

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Setting up Web Pages

For classes, we recommend using Blackboard- contact your instructional technology liaison for assistance.
For departments & organizations, Williams provides a number of options- see this article for more details.

More on Setting up Web Pages
Also See Network Storage

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Listservs

More on Listservs

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Wireless

The Office for Information Technology is pleased to provide a wireless network connection to registered users of the Williams Network. Wireless is available in all campus buildings. It is available outdoors where you are close enough to a building to connect. Please report any in-building locations where you can't connect so that we can fix them.

Getting started
To get started, connect to the Purple Help network, where you can find detailed directions on using Purple Air.

More Info on Wireless

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Network Data Storage & Backups

Personal File Server Space
All Williams users have their own personal file and web space on one of the Novell Netware servers: Achilles for students; Helen or Hector for Faculty and Staff; Jasper for OIT staff. New accounts are created with 150 MB of space. On Dell computers configured by OIT, this space is configured as the F: drive. The space is also accessible via netstorage.

Department File Server Space
Departments may share files using space on one of the Novell Netware servers. On PCs, this is the G: drive. The space is configured so everyone can share some files, and other files can be limited to individuals or groups. Contact the Faculty/Staff Support Desk at x4090 for more information. The space is also accessible via netstorage.

Academic Project Storage Space
The "Projects" server can be used for short or long-term storage of large files to be used in classes or research. Faculty should contact their instructional technology liaison for more information.

Network Backups
All network storage is backed up daily. However, keep in mind that backups are retained for one month. It would be impossible to retrieve a file from our server backup that you deleted two months ago.

Workstation Backups
Livebackup is a tool that backs up the changes you make on your local computer as they happen. It allows you to recover deleted files or revert to previous versions of files. We highly recommend downloading the client for your work computer.
More Info on Atempo Livebackup
Tips on Manually Backing up Data

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Green Computing

Green (i.e. sustainable) computing is about finding a balance between what we need to do and the impact that has on the environment. There are three main considerations in green computing: the energy the computer system uses; the resources used indirectly when working on the computer (ranging from paper for printing to the air conditioning that keeps the machines from over-heating); and what happens to old equipment when it's replaced or no longer needed.

OIT manages the institutional systems and supports programs with this in mind, but there are steps individual users can take as well. The three quickest and easiest things you can do are:

  • Turn off (or hibernate / deep sleep) your computer. Whether you're away from your room for the day, or out of your office for the night, shut down your machine before you leave (or set it to shut down automatically). You will not hurt your computer by turning it off and on each day.
  • Don't use a screen saver. For many people the screen saver is the most energy consuming application they run. Instead, have your screen go blank, or better yet set your monitor actually go to sleep (set via the power management system for your computer) - it uses less energy and it's better for the screen.
  • Don't print what you don't need. Williams goes through incredible amounts of paper, and much of it is never even picked up from the printer. Print double sided if your situation allows, print only the necessary pages, and pick up and use what you do print.

More Info on Green Computing

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Downloading Software

OIT provides a library of downloadable software available to current faculty, staff, and students for college related work. Most of the applications are controlled by a license manager called KeyServer. Therefore, your computer must be connected to the Williams network and have the KeyServer client installed for the application to run.

Installing Software

  1. Visit http://oit.williams.edu/software/ to see the list of available software.
  2. Make sure you have the KeyServer client installed.
    - If your computer was set up by OIT, you already have it.
    - If you do not have it installed, download "KeyServer client"
  3. Find the software you want to download, and click on the appropriate icon (Windows or Mac) to download it.
  4. An installer will appear on your desktop. Run the installer. You may need to restart your computer before the application is available.

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Printing to a Network Printer

Williams uses a print server so you can print to networked printers all over campus. The print server also helps us monitor the environmental impact of campus printing. You will need to install a client on your computer to access public campus printers. Instructions on how to set up campus printing can be found at http://print.williams.edu/.

Duplex Printing
Many printers on campus support duplex printing (printing on both sides of a sheet of paper). Please use this option unless you really need single sided printing. Duplex is the default on public lab printers that support it.

Student Printing Quota
Students are given a limited amount free printing per semester ($50 for underclassmen, $75 for seniors), which should cover all their academic printing needs. Additional credits can be purchased online or through the bursar.
Printing Quota FAQ

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Computing Policies

Please reread these policies from time to time. The specifics of the documents are subject to review and change.


Computing Ethics & Responsibilities
All members of the Williams Community should read, understand, and abide by the Computing Ethics & Responsibilities policy. It is a policy designed to protect everyone from malicious computing activities. Violation of Computing at Williams policies or procedures may result in the revocation of your computing privileges and/or other disciplinary action.


Privacy Policy
OIT respects your privacy and has put safeguards in place to protect it. Members of the community also need to protect the privacy of everyone on the Williams College network by keeping passwords secret and using college resources appropriately.


File Sharing and Copyright Violations
Williams regularly receives Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) notices. Don't let your computer be a file serving source. The College must respond to DMCA notices and pre-litigation letters.


Emergency Coverage
When the college is officially closed for non-essential personnel or when offices are closed but classes are in session, OIT will make every attempt to provide emergency coverage.


Printer Allocation
OIT will provide networked, post-script-capable, laser printers for workgroups. Printers will be located such that there is a workgroup printer convenient to all college employees who make use of printing. See the full policy for exceptions and support issues.

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