Monday, February 26, 2007

I'll shave my head for a good cause!

This Thursday marks the annual Shave-A-Thon held by Rothermere and Doyle houses. It is a fundraising event for the Janeway Children's Hospital in St. John's. The event is being held at the campus bar (The Breezeway) starting at 8:00pm. Besides the $2 ticket price - $3 at the door – there will be a minimum donation of $15 to have your head shaved. Since it is for a good cause I have issued a challenge to the people on my Facebook.com list to raise a total of $250 to see me have my head shaved. Currently two people have stepped up for a total of $25 but I am hoping that everyone else will fill in the remaining $225. In exchange for parting with their small donation I will separate with my hair. They get the benefit of knowing they helped a good case and the entertainment of me going bald. I get the satisfaction in knowing that the loss of my hair managed to net $250+ for the children’s hospital. I feel it is a fair trade.

So if you are interested in donating to the cause feel free to leave a comment below indicating how much you are willing to donate to see me loose my hair. If you are in St John’s show up at the breezeway with the your money at 8:00 on Thursday, if not make arrangements with me. Also, if you are a facebook user post your donation there.

Finally, if I do not reach the magic $250 mark I will still donate the money to the Janeway but you loose the pleasure of seeing me loose my locks of hair. However, I’ll see if I can pay (since it is a $15 min donation) for others to loose their hair with the donations.

Hope you can help me meet my goal and help some needy kids in the process.

Thursday, February 15, 2007

Comments? you have comments?

Have you ever had a comment about the Commons or for the Commons? Well if you have you are in luck. For the past three years we have had a comments box located next to the main support desk. If you are looking for it, you will find it next to the machine that allows you to put money on your print account. For the most part those comments were left un-replied, not to say they were ignored just it was rare for any follow up to be given.

So starting this week I have started my duties as the official replier of comments at the Commons. If you have a comment, suggestions, complaint, or concern about the facility, staff, equipment, etc feel free to leave your comments with us and I'll get back to you as soon as humanly possible. Also these replies will be posted publicly on the Commons webpage. A link will follow!

Update (18/02/07): I wanted to say that comments are always taken seriously and are addressed by the Commons. My above comment about it being rare for follow up to happen is in reference to communicating back to the person who left the comment. Idea's, complaints, suggestions, etc are always taken seriously and dealt with properly.

Thursday, February 8, 2007

Thefts

Recently in the Commons we have seen the theft of some of our computers, as well as some of the wiring for those computers. This causes us not only stress but to redirect some of our funding that was meant for improved or expanded services to replacing those computers. The Commons is not a rich organization and having to replace these machines means it will be longer before we offer some kind of service we were previously planning on.

So I am asking you, my kind readers, to keep an eye out for suspicious activities in the commons area. We do not perform maintenance of computer hardware, or the removal of computers during the evening or weekend time frames, so if you see someone who claims to be a employee of the Commons or Library picking at the hardware, or computer equipment report it to the nearest staff. They are likely not what they appear.

This really breaks our hearts and I hope that someone reading this blog has information about our previous thefts or will assist in the event of future problems.

Sunday, February 4, 2007

Labnet, your access to the Commons

Have you been asked to get a Unix account, Print account, CS account, one of those computer thingies that let you use the machines in the library? What ever it was called, we call it a Labnet account.

Labnet is the system we use to standardize the different computer facilities on campus. To you it is a simple combination of a user name and password which lets you use the computers in The Commons, DMC, the Chem/Phyiscs lab, CS1009, Phys ed, Education, etc. To us it is a complex network system. Either way you look at it, it is likely something you use every day. Your Labnet account lets you access the computers which all should have MS Office, unrestricted Internet access, Printer abilities, etc. Some machines have specialty software like SPSS (statistical software) but this is lab specific. It also lets you save your files on a secure network space – your H: - so you can access them from any other Labnet computer.

But did you know you can manage most aspects of your account on your own? The webpage http://webtools.cs.mun.ca/ is available for you to do things like check your print account balance (Keep in mind your print account IS your Labnet account), change your password, and even retrieve backup’s of your files. To use the site just enter your username and password.

So if you need to write a paper, do some graphs for an assignment, or just check your email. You are going to need a Labnet account.

*NOTE: Certain departments and faculties run their own systems restricted to their students. This might be a Labnet account with extra access for that lab, or a separate account altogether. Computer Science and Engineering are two prime examples.