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Archive for the ‘Systems and Services’ Category

Reminder: Box Storage Quota Changes

Wednesday, February 10th, 2021

This message was distributed to the Rice community on February 10, 2021.

Dear Rice Community:

This is a reminder that effective March 1, 2021, Rice University Box accounts will no longer have unlimited storage. 

Box has changed the service model for educational institutions, eliminating the unlimited file storage service from their contractual agreement. After assessing the storage usage and financial impacts to retain the service, the Information Technology Executive Committee, along with the University Committee on Information Technology and OIT, have agreed to the following: 

  • All faculty and staff will be limited to 1 TB of storage 
  • All undergraduate students will be limited to 500 GB of storage
  • All graduate students will be limited to 500 GB of storage

OIT is actively contacting individuals who are over their quota to offer advice on reducing usage and to review migration options. 

We are thankful for the feedback we received from faculty regarding the impact on their already funded and approved grants. Please contact the OIT Help Desk if you are facing this issue.  Note all data must be managed in accordance with university retention schedules, guidelines and compliance requirements, as well as departmental policies.  

For more information the Box storage quota, you may refer to: https://kb.rice.edu/68656.  If you have any questions or would like to discuss alternative storage solutions in excess of the limits above, contact the OIT Help Desk via email: helpdesk@rice.edu or the web form: https://oit.rice.edu/request-help.

Marc Cougle

Senior Director, IT – Infrastructure and Operations

Office of Information Technology

Rice University

Thresher: New Tech TA program popular with students and professors

Monday, November 16th, 2020

This is a reposting of a Rice Thresher article from September 15, 2020.

by Nicole Lhuillier

To assist instructors with the classroom technology for online or hybrid courses, the Office of Information Technology has hired 160 students as technology teaching assistants. According to the OIT Associate Vice President Diane Butler, faculty have requested Tech TAs for approximately 270 courses.

In the first round of hiring, the OIT received 300 job applications from students. The OIT also hired eight students to manage the Tech TAs’ schedules, Butler said. The application period for the Tech TA program is now closed, according to the information on the web page for the position.

“I knew my team would never be able to get to all the classrooms to assist faculty with the new, added technology [in] the rooms as my staff is very small, so we would have to supplement in some way. In talking to peers, I came up with the idea to have students help,” Butler said. “We were hoping students would be interested in assisting with this but I had no idea it would be such a popular job on campus.” Read rest of article.

Graduate Student Technology News

Sunday, November 15th, 2020
Newsletter distributed to Rice graduate students on September 1st, 2020
Rice OIT Logo

Graduate Student Technology News

Welcome to the fall semester! Here are reminders about the services and resources available to you from the Office of Information Technology (OIT). We are proud to support Rice’s mission and goals related to research, teaching, learning and scholarship as your technology partner.

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laptop with video conferencing people

Remote Learning

While each student may have different needs, there is a Preparing for Remote Learning checklist with considerations to prepare for and enhance your remote learning experience. You may also want to view the Student Guidelines for Remote Learning for suggestions and guidelines on participating in online events.

Online meetings and interactions can be an excellent way to stay engaged, get help when you need it, and feel supported. Zoom License accounts are available to all Rice faculty, staff, and students. You can also use it to schedule meetings or study sessions with other students. If you use Zoom, keep it updated so you will have the latest security fixes to prevent Zoombombing and other potential privacy issues. Google Meet is an alternate tool for virtual meetings and is accessible through the GSuite platform.

More: Rice University Guide to Remote Learning

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woman teaching via Zoom

Instructor Resources

If you teach, the Learning Environments (LE) group offers a variety of resources to help you learn to use instructional tools. Workshops and one-on-one training for Canvas (Learning Management System), Kaltura (digital media sharing), Zoom (video conferencing) and other educational technology tools can be found at the Training Center.

Classrooms and teaching studios are equipped with multimedia and audio/visual equipment. Find information about teaching equipment at Fall 2020 Technology Planning. Introductory and advanced training is available upon request.

If you encounter technical issues while teaching in a classroom, there are Tech TAs stationed throughout the academic buildings that are available to come assist your class. Each classroom has an information card that lists the location of the nearest Tech TA station. You can also call 713-348-4989.

For non-urgent questions, please email teaching@rice.edu. To subscribe to our monthly newsletter, go to LE-News and click Join Group.

More: Teaching and Learning Tools

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woman in front of statistical displays

Research Computing

The Center for Research Computing offers resources and services that can help you to scale and accelerate your own research and that which you do for your advisor.

Services:
•    One-on-one consulting (email help@rice.edu with subject: crc-facilitation)
•    Workshops and classes
•    On-boarding onto our resources

Resources:
•    Cloud computing (at Rice and beyond)
•    Data storage and data transfer
•    Supercomputing (at Rice and beyond)
•    Remote access to research computing resources

When your data is too big for your laptop, contact the Center for Research Computing! We’re here to hook you up with powerful tools and show you how to use them.

More: Research Computing

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guy with large, busy computer screen

Technology Security

Everyone in the Rice community is responsible for protecting the electronic assets of the university. Follow security precautions at your remote working locations and be aware of email scams from hackers trying to take advantage of uncertainty during the pandemic.

More: Information Security Office

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person with Excel on computer

Software

A number of software products are available for free or at a discounted rate to current students. Check out the list of Software Available to Students. Free products that can be installed on a personal computer include Microsoft 365, Matlab, SAS, SPSS, Mathematica and more. Discounted prices are available for Adobe Creative Cloud, Maple, and others.

Houston: If you are living and studying in Houston, please either download the software to your own computer or use a computer on campus.

Outside Houston: If you are fully remote outside Houston and are unable to download the software to your computer and need to access software for your class, please have your professor email teaching@rice.edu. We have a limited pool of VDI (virtual desktop infrastructure) computers that will be available to students studying fully remote that can’t download software to their computer.  (Note: The VMWare Horizon access to computer lab software from the spring has been deactivated.)

More: Software Availability Locations

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woman with headphones at computer

Campus Infrastructure

Networks: Departmental computers are connected to the wired network. The wireless networks available throughout campus are:

  • Rice Owls (secured via NetID and Password)
  • Rice Visitor (public network for visitors and guests)
  • Eduroam (collaborative world-wide access network)

Storage: Data storage, file sharing and collaboration spaces include U:drive, Rice Box, Microsoft One Drive, and Google Drive.

Voice and videoconferencing: Rice telephone system (Cisco VoIP services) and Zoom Videoconferencing.

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frustrated man with slow computer

Getting Help

OIT’s Help Desk is the central point of contact for computing help and support. Help Desk staff answer technical questions and route service requests to other OIT professionals. You can submit requests any time via the web site or email. You can also call during office hours.

Help button on a keyboard

Rice OIT Help Desk

OIT is currently providing contactless technical support only. Walk-in services and office visits have been suspended.

Telephone support:
713-348-4357 (HELP)
Monday – Friday: 8:00 a.m – 5:00 p.m.
(excluding holidays)

Request help electronically:
• complete online form
• email helpdesk@rice.edu

Online resources:
IT Status: Subscribe to email or text notifications about incidents or maintenance
Rice KnowledgeBase: Online how-to documentation and announcements

More: Help Desk Services

Faculty Technology News: Tips on Working Remotely

Wednesday, April 8th, 2020

Distributed via email to faculty on 4-3-2020.

Rice logo

 

 

Faculty Technology News (photo of dog in lap of man at computer)

We each have our individual challenges working from home- such as Annabelle who lives with a Rice OIT staff member. We hope you will find these resources helpful.


We Are Here For You

The Office of Information Technology is committed to supporting you as you adjust to teaching and working remotely. Prior to the start of remote teaching, Learning Environments (LE) partnered with Rice Online Learning and the Center for Teaching Excellence to offer individual workshops for each school as well as a number of one-on-one training sessions. There were 500 attendees at the school sessions while another 400 watched the recorded videos. LE held close to 100 one-on-one training sessions as well. We will continue to be here to support your teaching needs.

Support

Learning Environments staff are available by phone at 713-348-4989 to help you troubleshoot and answer problems while you are teaching. Business hours are from 7:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m., Monday – Friday but support staff members are on call in the evenings.

Additionally, if you have questions on Canvas, Kaltura, Zoom or any other academic technology, you can submit a Help Desk ticket (via our online help formor email) and someone from Learning Environments will contact you. We are happy to set up one-on-one training sessions via Zoom to provide you the help you need.

For more general questions, you can also call the Help Desk staff from 7:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m., Monday – Friday at 713-348-HELP (4357). (Walk-in services have been suspended.) Or look for the answer to your question by searching our KnowledgeBase.

Remote Teaching Resources

A number of excellent resourceshave been created to help you with questions or step by step instructions on how to do something. The Remote Teaching Resourcesguide in Canvas offers steps for communicating with your students, creating a course in Canvas, using Zoom, securing Zoom for privacyand a number of additional functional tools, such as how to share documents, record a lecture, give a live lecture, create an assessment, and more.

Tools

Canvas

Rice’s learning management system, Canvas, is designed to manage your courses and student communications. You can find information on using Canvas in the Remote Teaching Resources modulewithin Canvas. You can also get 24/7 support via chat or phone from within Canvas. For details, log in to Canvas and click on the Help icon. For tips and tricks, follow the Teaching and Learning with Canvas blog.

Video Conferencing

Zoomis a collaboration and online meeting tool. Zoom License accounts (formerly called Pro accounts) are available to all Rice faculty, staff, and students. Zoom can also be used in Canvasto allow instructors to schedule online meetings within Canvas. Google Hangouts Meetis an alternate tool for virtual meetings and is accessible through the G Suite platform.

Recording Your Lectures/Lessons

There are a couple of options for recording your lessons for viewing offline or asynchronous delivery. Zoom allows for recordingand works well when you are presenting to a live audience. If you wish to record your lessons in advance, Kalturaworks well for this. Kaltura is a lecture capture tool and can receive multiple inputs (webcam, doc cam, etc.).

Software

Faculty are eligible for free and discounted software including Adobe Creative Cloud, Crashplan, Office 365, Matlab, Mathematica and more. Many of our vendors have extended the usage of our licenses to allow faculty and students to be able to download the software onto their personal computer at no cost to them. Check the software pageto see which software includes this feature.

Secure Connections

Additional software may be needed to securely connect to Rice resources. Using VPN(virtual private network) securely connects your computer to the Rice network.  Duoprovides an extra authentication step and is required by some systems, such as VPN and Esther.

Home Network

One of the challenges of working remotely can be your home Internet service. If you are having issues, check out these helpful tips from Internet2 (Rice is a member of this collaborative research and education technology community.)

Tips for Troubleshooting Home Connectivity

Optimizing Your Home Network for Working and Learning

Research Computing

If you already use Rice research computing resources, access remains the same since using research computing resourcesis done remotely. If you are interested, the Center for Research Computingstaff welcomes the opportunity to support your research computing needs. CRC staff can offer advice and set up services from high-performance computing/high-throughput computing (HPC/HTC) to research virtual machines and cloud (ORION) to research data facility (RDF).

Security Reminder

Follow university guidelinesto protect your computer and Rice data. Keep your guard up against email scams designed to obtain your account information, especially during this crisis.

Staff Technology News: Tips on Working Remotely

Wednesday, April 8th, 2020

Distributed via email to staff on 4-8-2020.

Rice logo

 

 

Staff Technology News (photo of dog in lap of man at computer)

We each have our individual challenges working from home- such as Annabelle who lives with a Rice OIT staff member. We hope you will find these resources helpful.


We Are Here For You

The Office of Information Technology is committed to supporting the university as many of us adjust to teaching, learning, and working remotely. Below are some of the tools and resources available to connect us and enable us to continue operations. If you are experiencing issues or need assistance, contact the OIT Help Desk.

Support

You can call Help Desk staff from 7:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m., Monday – Friday at 713-348-HELP (4357). Walk-in services have been suspended. You may also submit a request by completing our online help form or sending an email. Or look for the answer to your question by searching our KnowledgeBase.

Remote Resources

The Preparing for Remote Working page offers steps for preparing to work at home and is followed by a reference guide of functional tools, such as how to store files, how to connect to secure Rice resources, and more. Be sure to check out the Technology Guide to Remote Working as well with links to information on how to collaborate on files and best practices for working remotely.

Tools

Managing Office Phones

You can manage your office phone remotely using the features of the new VoIP phone system. Single Number Reachwill allow you to set up an additional phone number (such as your mobile phone) that will also ring when your office line is called during scheduled times (e.g. Monday through Friday, 8-5pm). Call forwardingdirects calls to voicemail or another number. Access your voicemail remotelyby calling 713-348-3000 and following the prompts.

Video Conferencing

Zoom is a collaboration and online meeting tool. Zoom License accounts (formerly called Pro accounts) are available to all Rice faculty, staff, and students. Zoom can also be used in Canvas to allow instructors to schedule online meetings within Canvas. Google Hangouts Meet is an alternate tool for virtual meetings and is accessible through the GSuite platform.

Alert: If you use Zoom, please keep it updated so you will have the latest security fixes to prevent Zoombombing and other potential privacy issues. Read more aboutZoom Meeting Privacy and Security.

Software

Staff are eligible for free and discounted softwareincluding Adobe Creative Cloud, Crashplan, Office 365, Matlab, Mathematica and more. Many of our vendors have extended the usage of our licenses to allow employees and students to be able to download the software onto their personal computer at no cost to them.

Secure Connections

Additional software may be needed to securely connect to Rice resources. Using VPN (virtual private network) securely connects your computer to the Rice network. Duo provides an extra authentication step and is required by some systems, such as VPN and Esther.

Home Network

One of the challenges of working remotely can be your home Internet service. If you are having issues, check out these helpful tips from Internet2 (Rice is a member of this collaborative research and education technology community.)

Tips for Troubleshooting Home Connectivity

Optimizing Your Home Network for Working and Learning

Security Reminder

Follow university guidelinesto protect your computer and Rice data. Keep your guard up against email scams designed to obtain your account information, especially during this crisis.

Graduate Student Technology News: Tips on Working Remotely

Wednesday, April 8th, 2020

Distributed via email to graduate students on 4-8-2020.

Rice logo

Graduate Student Technology News (photo of dog at laptop)

We each have our individual challenges working from home- such as Banjo who lives with a Rice OIT staff member. We hope you will find these resources helpful.


We Are Here For You

The Office of Information Technology is committed to supporting the university as many of us adjust to teaching, learning, and working remotely. It is critical for you to remain connected and in communication with your instructors and other students as we finish the semester online. Below are tools and resources available to support your online experience. If you are also an instructor, see the section on remote teaching at the end of this newsletter.  If you are experiencing issues or need assistance, the OIT Help Desk is available to support you.

Support

You can call Help Desk staff from 7:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m., Monday – Friday at 713-348-HELP (4357). Walk-in services have been suspended. You may also submit a request by completing our online help form or sending an email. Or look for the answer to your question by searching our KnowledgeBase.

Remote Learning Resources

There are many resources online to support your remote learning experience.  While each student may have different needs, there is a Preparing for Remote Learning checklist with considerations to prepare for and enhance your remote learning experience. The Rice University Guide to Remote Learning provides an overview of resources with step by step instructions. You may also want to view the Student Guidelines for Remote Learning for suggestions and guidelines on participating in online meetings.

Tools

Video Conferencing

Zoom is a collaboration and online meeting tool. Zoom License accounts (formerly called Pro accounts) are available to all Rice faculty, staff, and students. Zoom can also be used in Canvas to allow instructors to schedule online meetings within Canvas. Google Hangouts Meet is an alternate tool for virtual meetings and is accessible through the GSuite platform.

Alert: If you use Zoom, please keep it updated so you will have the latest security fixes to prevent Zoombombing and other potential privacy issues. Read more about Zoom Meeting Privacy and Security.

Remote Lab Access

Depending on the course, you might need to remotely login to a lab computer using virtual desktop access. You will need to install VMWare Horizon Client.

Software

Students are eligible for free and discounted software including Adobe Creative Cloud, Crashplan, Office 365, Matlab, Mathematica and more. Many of our vendors have extended the usage of our licenses to allow you to download the software onto your personal computer at no cost.

Secure Connections

Additional software may be needed to securely connect to Rice resources. Using VPN (virtual private network) securely connects your computer to the Rice network.  Duo provides an extra authentication step and is required by some systems, such as VPN and Esther.

Home Internet

One of the challenges of learning remotely can be your home Internet service. If you are having issues, check out these helpful tips from Internet2, a collaborative research and education technology community that Rice belongs to.

Tips for Troubleshooting Home Connectivity

Optimizing Your Home Network for Working and Learning

Research Computing

If you already use Rice research computing resources, access remains the same since using research computing resources is done remotely. If you are interested, the Center for Research Computing staff welcomes the opportunity to support your research computing needs. CRC staff can offer advice and set up services from high-performance computing/high-throughput computing (HPC/HTC) to research virtual machines and cloud (ORION) to research data facility (RDF).

Security Reminder

Follow university guidelines to protect your computer and Rice data. Keep your guard up against email scams designed to obtain your account information, especially during this crisis.

Instructor Resources

Support

Learning Environments staff are available by phone at 713-348-4989 to help you troubleshoot and answer problems while you are teaching. Business hours are from 7:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m., Monday – Friday but support staff members are on call in the evenings.

Remote Teaching Resources

The Preparing for Remote Teaching page has been created to help you with questions in your role as an instructor. The Remote Teaching Resources guide in Canvas offers steps for communicating with your students, creating a course in Canvas, using Zoom, securing Zoom for privacy and a number of additional functional tools, such as how to share documents, record a lecture, give a live lecture, create an assessment, and more.

Canvas

Rice’s learning management system, Canvas, is designed to manage your courses and student communications. You can find information on using Canvas in the Remote Teaching Resources module within Canvas. You can also get 24/7 support via chat or phone from within Canvas. For details, log in to Canvas and click on the Help icon. For tips and tricks, follow the Teaching and Learning with Canvas blog.

Recording Your Lectures/Lessons

There are a couple of options for recording your lessons for viewing offline or asynchronous delivery. Zoom allows for recording and works well when you are presenting to a live audience. If you wish to record your lessons in advance, Kaltura works well for this. Kaltura is a lecture capture tool and can receive multiple inputs (webcam, doc cam, etc.).

Undergraduate Technology News: Tips on Working Remotely

Wednesday, April 8th, 2020

Distributed via email to undergraduates on 4-8-2020.

Rice logo

 

Undergraduate Technology News (photo of two students with pets)

Since many students are home, you might see a wagging tail or hear a meow in the middle of a live class. Meet Zoom fur buddies Edison and Hanna Gratch (Hanszen ’21) on left and Rosie and Madison Morris (Sid Rich ’21) on right.


We Are Here For You

The Office of Information Technology is committed to supporting the university as many of us adjust to teaching, learning, and working remotely. It is critical for you to remain connected and in communication with your instructors and other students as we finish the semester online. Below are tools and resources available to support your online learning experience. If you are experiencing issues or need assistance, the OIT Help Desk is available to support you.

Support

You can call Help Desk staff from 7:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m., Monday – Friday at 713-348-HELP (4357). Walk-in services have been suspended. You may also submit a request by completing our online help form or sending an email. Or look for the answer to your question by searching our KnowledgeBase.

Remote Learning Resources

A number of excellent resources are available online to support your remote learning experience.  While each student may have different needs, there is a Preparing for Remote Learning checklist with considerations to prepare for and enhance your remote learning experience. The Rice University Guide to Remote Learning provides an overview of resources with step by step instructions. You may also want to view the Student Guidelines for Remote Learning for suggestions and guidelines on participating in online meetings.

Tools

Video Conferencing

Online meetings and interactions can be an excellent way to stay engaged, get help when you need it, and feel supported. Zoom is a collaboration and online meeting tool. Zoom License accounts are available to all Rice faculty, staff, and students. Your instructors may use Zoom in Canvas for online meetings. You can also use it to schedule meetings or study sessions with other students. Google Hangouts Meet  is an alternate tool for virtual meetings and is accessible through the GSuite platform.

Alert: If you use Zoom, please keep it updated so you will have the latest security fixes to prevent Zoombombing and other potential privacy issues. Read more about Zoom Meeting Privacy and Security.

Remote Lab Access

Depending on the course, you might need to remotely login to a lab computer using virtual desktop access. You will need to install VMWare Horizon Client.

Software

Students are eligible for free and discounted software including Adobe Creative Cloud, Crashplan, Office 365, Matlab, Mathematica and more. Many of our vendors have extended the usage of our licenses to allow you to download the software onto your personal computer at no cost.

Secure Connections

Additional software may be needed to securely connect to Rice resources. Using VPN (virtual private network) securely connects your computer to the Rice network.  Duo provides an extra authentication step and is required by some systems, such as VPN and Esther.

Home Internet

One of the challenges of learning remotely can be your home Internet service. If you are having issues, check out these helpful tips from Internet2, a collaborative research and education technology community that Rice belongs to.

Tips for Troubleshooting Home Connectivity

Optimizing Your Home Network for Working and Learning

Security Reminder

Follow university guidelines to protect your computer and Rice data. Keep your guard up against email scams designed to obtain your account information, especially during this crisis.

three students with dogs

More faces you might see on Zoom!  left to right: Nanuq and Athena Chien (Jones ’21),  Minnie and Alex DeAnda (Sid Rich ’21), and Hannah George (Wiess ’21) and Jasper.

Welcome New Faculty: Getting Connected to OIT

Monday, October 7th, 2019

This message was sent to new faculty on August 22, 2019.

 

Rice OIT logo

 

 

 

Getting Connected with OIT

Welcome to Rice University! The Office of Information Technology (OIT) is excited that you are joining the Rice community as a new faculty member. We are proud to serve Rice’s mission and goals related to research, teaching, learning, and scholarship as your technology partner.

photo of two people with computer

 

 

 

 

 

Instructor Resources
Canvas is Rice’s Learning Management System. Training is offered at the beginning of the semester.

Learning Spaces are equipped with multimedia and audio/visual equipment including 99 classrooms and 4 teaching labs. Introductory and advanced training is available upon request.

More: Teaching and Learning Tools

two people using computers

 

 

 

 

 

Account Management
MyNetID is the account management system and where you can reset your NetID password or set up an alias email address.

Duo is a two-factor authentication service for a growing number of campus systems.

VPN or virtual private network provides secure connection to the Rice campus network from off campus.

Esther is for all employees to select benefits, view pay stubs, set up direct deposit, etc. Login with employee ID and pin.

More: Administrative Applications

abstract image of DNA

 

 

 

 

 

Research Computing
The Center for Research Computing provides shared facilities and services for computing, visualization, data-storage, and networking to support the research mission of the university.

More: Tools and Resources

image about data safety

 

 

 

 

 

Technology Security
Everyone in the Rice community is responsible for protecting the electronic assets of the university. Information security awareness training is required of all faculty and staff. This training is delivered through video modules in Canvas and takes approximately 30 minutes to complete.

More: Information Security Office

photo of tech devices

Software
Certain software products are available for free or at a discounted rate to Rice employees. For instance, Office 365 can be used for free and CrashPlan (backup service for Mac/PC) requires a yearly $82 fee).

More: Software Available for Faculty and Staff

abstract image of computing in cloud

 

 

 

 

 

Campus Infrastructure

Networks: Faculty and staff office computers are connected to the wired network. The wireless network is available throughout campus: Rice Owls (secured -NetID and Password); Rice Visitor (public network for visitors and guests); and Eduroam (member of a collaborative world-wide access network).

Storage:  Data storage, file sharing and collaboration spaces include U:drive and Google Teams/Drive.

Voice and videoconferencing: Rice telephone system (Cisco VoIP services) and Zoom Videoconferencing.

Getting Help from OIT

OIT’s Help Desk is the central point of contract for computing help and support. Help Desk staff answer technical questions and route service requests to other OIT professionals. You can submit requests any time via the web site or email. You can also call or drop by during office hours.

As a new member of the Rice community, your OIT Divisional Representative can configure your Rice-owned computer or consult on a new computer purchase. They can also help set up your email, printing, mobile devices and provide information about technology resources.

photo of help button on keyboard

 

 

 

 

 

Rice OIT Help Desk 
713-348-4357 (HELP)
Mudd Lab, room 103
Monday – Friday:  8:00 a.m – 5:00 p.m.
(excluding holidays)

Request help electronically:
– complete online form
– email helpdesk@rice.edu

Online resources:
IT Status: Subscribe to email or text notifications about incidents or maintenance
Rice KnowledgeBase: Online how-to documentation and announcements

More: Help Desk Services

More information:  Getting Started with IT for Faculty

NOTS Cluster Orientation Workshop – Oct. 10, 2019

Tuesday, October 1st, 2019

Are you interested in High Performance Computing resources at Rice?  Or a new student or postdoc who needs to use HPC resources for your research?  Maybe you already have a NOTS account, but want to learn more about how to make the most of the system?

The Center for Research Computing is holding a two hour workshop, “NOTS Cluster New User Orientation,” on Oct. 10, 2019 from 8:30 – 10:30 am in the Ken Kennedy Conference room, Duncan Hall 3076.

Topics covered will include:

How to get a NOTS account
Charges for using the system
Help & Documentation
Logging in for the first time
Data management on the cluster
Using software on the cluster
Using the SLURM resource manager to schedule jobs
MATLAB examples using the NOTS cluster for larger scale computational tasks

Please RSVP by email to heider@rice.edu if you plan to attend.

Migration to Windows 10 Operating System

Wednesday, May 8th, 2019

This is a reposting of an email sent to Rice community on 5-6-19.

Dear Colleagues,

Just a reminder, Microsoft announced the end of support and security updates for computers running Windows 7 operating system after January 14, 2020.  This presents a potential burden of risk to Rice’s computing environment.

As a result, all Rice faculty or staff members with Rice-owned computer(s) running Windows 7 will need to be upgraded to Windows 10. We need your assistance to complete the upgrade of your system(s) to Windows 10 by December 2019.

The Office of Information Technology provides Rice University users the ability to upgrade their Rice-owned Windows 7 computer(s) to Windows 10.  In order to take advantage of this self-service upgrade:

  • Your computer must be a member of Rice’s Active Directory (ADRICE).
  • If your PC is not on ADRICE, OIT can schedule a time to facilitate this process and kick-start your Windows 10 upgrade.

For more on Windows 10 Migration, refer to the following Rice KB articles:

To ensure the security and integrity of computer systems running at Rice, any computing device running unsupported operating systems or configured in an insecure manner are subject to restrictions when connecting to the Rice network.

If you have plans to be away for an extended period of time this summer, consider upgrading your computer system to Windows 10 before your departure.

If you need assistance, please contact the Help Desk at 713-348-4357 or submit a request by emailing: helpdesk@rice.edu.

Regards,

Diane Yee
Assistant Director, IT Customer Service
Office of Information Technology
Rice University