General Development Labs
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Last updated: 2 Oct 2015

Overview

The General Development Labs — DOU 110, SCI 106 and SCI 108 — address the needs of:

  • students to use software that complements their course topic or supports other academic interests

  • instructors to instruct or demonstrate the use of software

  • mentors to assist fellow students in their academic studies

  • development staff to encourage and promote potential students to pursue studies in Institute programs or related areas

Lab Administration

Institute lab staff, under faculty advisement concerning academic needs, are responsible for equipping, securing, configuring and maintaining these labs and the infrastructure supporting them.

  • Rooms

    Rooms can be reserved by faculty and staff for classes or special purposes, such as exams, special presentations, computer camps, and monitored programming labs.

    The layout of desks in some rooms are re-configurable, if there is a need.

  • Workstation computers

    Our goal is fast, capable computers with ample ports for external peripherals, network connectivity, moderate-sized monitors, removable media support, and a re-imageable local hard disk.

    The computer workstations in these labs are designed to be uniform in functionality. Uniformity allows a student to choose any available seat to, for example, design, code, and test programs and databases, and/or create documents and spreadsheets.

  • Network

    The network provides connectivity to Institute servers, including login and file storage servers, as well as to other computers worldwide via the Internet.

  • Software

    The workstations support the core curriculum and some of the coursework of the electives; consequently, they have many software applications installed that are of broad applicability.

    Software such as the operating system, web browsers, secure file transfer, and office-type software (e.g., word-processing and spreadsheet) form the base level. On top of this is software that is related to coursework or has great utility in doing coursework, such as compilers, editors, remote access mechanisms, graphics programs, math programs, and database access clients. None of this software is designed to be changed by the user, and some of the software has restrictions on its use.

    Course-related software is generally recommended by the faculty. All software is licensed, installed, configured and maintained by Institute lab staff.

Change Log

2 Oct 2015 Added room numbers for better clarity; revised some wording about faculty use and hardware features
25 May 2004 Original document

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