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Leveraging student owned laptops on campus: I can't connect to the network. can you help me?

Published: 06 November 2005 Publication History

Abstract

In 2003, the Help Desk at Integrated Technology Services (ITS) began receiving an increasing number of requests from students for laptop services and support. After surveying Canadian universities to see how they handled the issue (almost all recommended we stay out of the student laptop support business), we decided to move forward with a pilot project. The mandate of the pilot was to implement what services we could, within our budget, to encourage the use of student laptops on campus. This project supplemented, but did not replace, the existing support provided within the Residence system [4]. It also looked at ways to encourage students to use their own laptops instead of the lab computers funded by UNB. Funding for the pilot was obtained from the University's Student Technology Fee [5]. The funding covered the cost of a Computer Science Co-op student for each term of the year long project. These students, under the guidance of a full-time staff member, did research, developed a web site, made recommendations for the pilot project and provided the actual end user support.The pilot, added some services where were not previously provided to students, took advantage of initiatives that were already underway, and was careful not to duplicate the existing Residence IT support service. New services included a strong educational component promoted in one on one conversation with customers as well as through the new laptop support website. Regular laptop support hours at the ITS Help Desk and at the UNB Library located across campus were instituted. Additional new services included a web-based paid-as-you-go printing service that could be accessed from personal laptops. New laptop connection stations within existing computer labs were also added. Existing initiatives that were leveraged included a laptop registration service for our residence network that did preliminary checking of laptops for patches and virus prior to the laptop being allowed on the network, and a new about-to-be-introduced service which allowed web access to network drives. Because the UNB Residence system already had in place a personal computer support service for Residence students accessing the resident network, the pilot was careful not to duplicate this service. The laptop support service pilot was targeted to residence students wishing to use their laptop outside of the residence network and to providing non residence students help getting their personal laptops on the UNB network and with security issues such as operating system patching, virus protection and removal.

References

[1]
Smith, Cindy. ITS provides laptop support. In The Brunswickan Online. Volume 138, Issue 3 September 22, 2004. http://www.unb.ca/bruns/0405/03/index.htm.
[2]
Stewart, Megan. Introduction to Integrated Technology Services, Fall 2004. Internal publication, Integrated Technology Services, University of New Brunswick, New Brunswick, Canada, 2004
[3]
Computer Science Cooperative Education web site. http://www.cs.unb.ca/co-op/
[4]
Residential Life Resnet web site. http://www.unbf.ca/housing/reslife/resnet/
[5]
Student Technology Fee web site. http://www.unbf.ca/its/students/techfee/.
[6]
UNB Laptop Support web site. http://www.unbf.ca/its/students/owncomp/laptop/support.htm

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cover image ACM Conferences
SIGUCCS '05: Proceedings of the 33rd annual ACM SIGUCCS conference on User services
November 2005
482 pages
ISBN:1595932003
DOI:10.1145/1099435
Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than ACM must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, or republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a fee. Request permissions from [email protected]

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Association for Computing Machinery

New York, NY, United States

Publication History

Published: 06 November 2005

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Author Tags

  1. customer service
  2. help desk
  3. laptops
  4. security
  5. support

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SIGUCCS Fall05
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