The proliferation of Wi-Fi hot spots at airports and coffee shops has whet users' appetites for more--and once college students and faculty experience the convenience of wireless bandwidth, it doesn't take long before they begin asking their information technology administrators to install it on campus, too.
Wi-Fi is becoming an important initiative for more and more colleges and universities. And for a large public university such as Florida State in Tallahassee, that undertaking can be similar in scale to that of a municipal deployment. Like other academic institutions implementing Wi-Fi, FSU has faced funding, security and manpower issues--and has found some creative solutions to all three challenges.
INITIAL EXPERMENT
IT personnel at FSU first began experimenting with Wi-Fi about four years ago as a means of connecting several outlying buildings to the campus computer network without having to lay fiber. That experience taught them that they would need to address potential security vulnerabilities before expanding further, says Clint Ringgold, FSU coordinator of computer system control. "We decided to go with a gateway approach to take care of security," Ringgold says.
A year of in-house testing followed. "We required people to log on to the campus network," says Ringgold. "That empowered us to be able to take known user information from the university and if there is a security issue, we can determine the individuals who might have been involved."
Manpower issues also were top of mind. "Part of our solution was that our network had to be able to be run by a very small number of people," Ringgold says. "We have three people in our wireless group taking care of approximately 3,000 total users, including 1,500 on a daily basis." Those numbers continue to climb and could swell to include all 40,000 faculty, staff and students as more and more computers come equipped with Wi-Fi cards.
Network administrators developed several computer screens that would be automatically sent to users when certain situations arose to help the users solve the situation on their own. If users have a virus problem or are consuming too much bandwidth, for example, a screen appears on their computer advising them of the problem.
Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Sony Ericsson C902 Review

With a multitude of functions and an excellent 5 MP camera the Sony Ericsson C902 takes thecamera phone to new heights. OK we will have a look at a detailed review from mobilephone blog. Stylish and usable The Sony Ericsson C902's very simple style does not break any ground in innovation in design. It feels good to handle. Sometimes Sony Ericsson phones'buttons are tiny and awkard. At 49mm wide, 10.5mm thick and 107g in weight this device is not too far off the average. And the numberpad buttons on the Sony Ericsson C902 are large and easy to handle.They are perfect for texting. The silver trimming around the edges gives a classy appeal. The camera It is the camera that is likely to sell the C902 to the masses. With a 5 megapixel capability simply the start, there is few that Sony Ericsson have not included on this camera phone. Face detection and a flashlight that can be used in conjunction with video capability are equipped in Sony Ericsson C902. Further, digital image stabilisation technology is present, and the settings can all be adjusted with the very capable navigation system. Tagging is built in, too, with all above the Sony Ericsson C902 keeps up the Cyber-shot rep for taking quality photos. What else can it do? There is more than just photography to the Sony Ericsson C902. It supports HSDPA high speed web browsing technology a feature that is required in a phone in this class and also a full media system that is based around the famed Sony Walkman device. A memory expansion is available, although it is exclusive to the manufacturer just like many Sony Ericsson devices. Like the Sony Ericsson K850i, this slim shooter sports accelerometer motion sensors for viewing snaps or web pages in landscape mode. The Sony Ericsson C902 received a number of critical comments for freezing and screens blanking when it was first released, and there have been complaints about the battery life of the C902, yet overall the Sony Ericsson C902 is a good camera phone with many useful features and continues to sell well and performs very admirably for most users.
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