css.engineering.uiowa.edu    CSS Quick Start Guide

Account   Login    Passwords   Email   Printing   Files and Quotas    Access   Security, Responsibilities   Help

Your Engineering Computer Account

Engineering College faculty and staff, and all students registered in the Engineering College or taking an Engineering course, have an Engineering computer account.

Your Engineering account ID and your Hawk ID should match. Though the IDs look the same, initially they do not have the same password and they do not give you access to the same services. You must use your Engineering account ID to login to machines on the Engineering Computer Network (ECN). You must use your Hawk ID to login to ITC and classroom machines. (In addition, your Hawk ID gives you access to other University services.) Changing your Engineering account password has no effect on your Hawk ID password and vice versa.

You can login to Linux or Windows computers in the College with your Engineering account. The same account and password also gives you access to Engineering email.

Login

After you have your Engineering account and password, find a computer. The student computer labs in the Seamans Center, the Hering (1220 SC) and Elder (1231 SC) labs, have a mixture of Linux workstations running SUSE Linux and Windows computers running Windows Vista. The Henry Computer Classroom, 1245 SC, has 33 Windows computers running Vista. Follow the chart below to begin using one of those computers.  

Linux Windows
Find a machine Named L-LNX### and labeled "LINUX" Named L-COExxx and labeled "WINDOWS"
Logging in Move mouse to get login banner; enter Username and press Enter; then type your password and press Enter.
     If you get the message: "Incorrect username or password", you may have mistyped your user name or password. Login banner prompts for your user name and password again.
Press Ctrl + Alt + Delete; click OK after reading the notice; enter user name, press Tab, and enter your password on the Logon Information dialogue box.

   If you see the message: "The system could not log you on...," read the suggestions and try again.

   If the screen remains blank, notify CSS staff, 1253 SC.

Cannot login Caps Lock may be on; passwords are case sensitive. User name may be incorrect.  Caps Lock may be on; passwords are case sensitive. User name or Log on to: domain may be incorrect; verify both.
Logging out Go to the Main Menu Button, select Leave, then Logout
    
Go to click arrow to right of search bar and select Log Off
     or
Press Ctrl + Alt + Delete keys at the same time and select Log Off.
Logout problems If you have a problem logging out, don't turn off the computer. Contact CSS staff, 1253 SC, 335-5055, for help.
Changing your password

Read the section below about passwords.

Use the password tool.

Read the section below about passwords.
Press Ctrl + Alt + Delete and select the Change Password button. Enter the current password and your new password twice.

Passwords

Passwords protect your account from unauthorized access. Computer Systems Support (CSS) implements password restrictions to deter password "cracking." Passwords are valid for 180 days, but may be changed more often.

Enroll so that you can change your password from the web at any time; no need to wait for the CSS office to be open. Read about using the password tool.

Select a password that meets the following criteria:

• is at least 9 characters long.
• includes 2 numbers.
• does not include any 4 consecutive characters of the user name or Hawk ID.
• does not match any of the 10 previous passwords.

For security we suggest that you do not use a proper name or a word that appears in an English dictionary and that you use at least one non-alphanumeric character in your password:
   . , + - $ [ ] * & ^ / % { } | " ' ? < > _ : ;
DO NOT use the characters \ ! @ # [space]

Password problems and time limits

When resetting your password, you must choose a password that complies with the criteria above. If you enter an invalid password, you are asked to enter one that meets the above criteria.

Your email password (see Email section below) is the same as your account password; when you change your account password, your email password is also changed.

Your password is valid for 180 days. Two weeks prior to the date that your password will expire, you will get daily reminder messages to change your password. Once your password has expired, the next time you log in, the system will prompt you to change your password.

Email

Account Information

An electronic mail account on the mail server is created as part of your Engineering account. Your email password is the same as that for your Engineering account.

With an IMAP mail account your mail is all stored on a central mail server so that you can read and retrieve mail from any computer using one of several mail clients. Depending on where you choose to read your mail, you may need to download some client software to read your mail. CSS supports the mail clients Thunderbird (Windows and Linux), Outlook (Windows), and Webmail (web). For client and connection information, go to the email pages.

Please note that account holders are expected to read email sent to their Engineering account. You can forward email sent to your Engineering account to another mailbox. Use the account tools to do so.

Your Email Address

Once your Engineering account has been created, your email address is: loginID@engineering.uiowa.edu where loginID is your Engineering computer account. When a student or employee enters the University, a University-defined alias, usually in the form of firstname-lastname@uiowa.edu, is also created. Using ISIS (students) or Self Service (faculty and staff), you can set mail delivery so that mail sent to first-last@uiowa.edu is delivered to your Engineering account mailbox.

Email Configuration

CSS supports several email clients. We suggest using Thunderbird on Linux or Windows machines, and Webmail when you are traveling and have access to a browser. For Thunderbird, you may need to define your mail server. Use mail.engineering.uiowa.edu as the incoming and outgoing (SMTP) mail servers.

For information on configuring email, see the email pages. If you have questions about what option to choose or how to configure mail service, please talk to the consultant, 319-335-5055, 1253 SC.

Printing

Printers for students are available in the Elder and Hering labs, as well as in the consulting office, 1253 SC. Each department has at least one laser printer for departmental use and some departments also have color printers. Check in the departmental office to find out what printers are available.

Print quotas for students

Every student account is allocated print quota from state revenues. Pages printed cost $.05 each on the lab printers; color printing is available in the consulting office for $.25/page. Currently print quota is $10.00. After the initial amount is used, students are automatically authorized for credit printing up to $25/month. If you have questions about quota, read about printing or come to the CSS office, 1256 SC. To add more money to your print quota, go to the Engineering Electronics Shop, 2018 SC.

Checking your print quota

Students see the Papercut balance window in the top right of the screen, whether on Linux or Windows. Click Details... in the Papercut balance window for information about the number of print jobs, pages, and the environmental impact your printing had. You can minimize the Papercut window.

How to print

From Linux and Windows programs, go to File | Print. When in the Elder or Hering labs, the print command routes your file to the nearest printer.

File Locations & Quotas

Engineering accounts have a disk quota based on your account type (student, guest, staff/faculty). Separate from disk quota, each account has a mail quota for storing and receiving mail. Check your mail quota. Students also have a print quota.

Files that you create and save in your home directory (the H:\ drive for Windows users) can be seen whether you login on a Linux or a Windows computer; however, documents created with platform-specific software that is installed and available only on one computer platform, can be opened and used only when logged onto the appropriate type of computer. Fluent files can be created from and viewed only when using a Linux workstation. However, Word documents can be opened from a Windows machine that has Microsoft Word installed or a Linux workstation that has Open Office.

In addition to viewing and editing files in your home directory, you may have access to files that are used and shared by others in your department or in your work group. Because the directories and associated files are shared by more than one person, we call these “shares.” You may have access to more than one share. Having access to a share requires these things:

Windows Notes

By default Microsoft Office products (Word, Excel, etc.) want to save files to Documents. CSS has mapped Documents to H:\Documents.

To accomplish operating system maintenance, Windows computers in the student labs are set with Automatic Update turned on. When there is a patch to install, the lab computers will be patched beginning at 3pm. During patch time, all the Windows computers in the labs will be unavailable for the few minutes it takes to install the patch(es) and reboot.

Wireless, Public, Remote Access

UI wireless networking in the College of Engineering covers the entire Seamans Center.

Public wired ports in Seamans Center are marked with a green dot and found in some classrooms and all conference and seminar rooms. See the consultant in 1253 SC for help setting up your computer to work on the wireless or wired networks.

Remote access to your home directory is available via an ISP and requires a modem and communications software on your computer. Students pay no monthly fee for the University-supplied remote access; faculty and staff pay $5/month for that service. You may also need to download client software on your home computer. For example, you must use SSH to connect to the Engineering network; SecureCRT, software that lets you use an SSH connection, is available on the ITS download site. Connect2 VPN also creates a secure connection. Once you have the appropriate software installed, you must configure the software so that it knows what system to connect to. To log in remotely to the Engineering network, configure the remote host name to: login.engineering.uiowa.edu

Security, Responsibilities

Learn about the College's secure computing environment and what you can do to keep your account secure.

Having an Engineering computer account means that you agree to abide by the Acceptable Use Policy that details CSS responsibilities, account owner responsibilities, usage guidelines, and suggested good practices.

Help

CSS’s mission is to provide a secure and productive computer environment that supports the ability of the College of Engineering to achieve its educational mission. To answer your computing questions, CSS consultants are available in 1253 SC,319- 335-5055.

Information is usually published to the web first. Read the CSS web pages now.

CSS publishes an on-line newsletter, Essentials, about 4 times per year.

The Engineering College publishes E/WEEK, a weekly electronic bulletin. It lists events of interest to students, staff, and faculty in the college. Read the current issue.


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updated: 21 October 2009
CSS | College of Engineering | © The University of Iowa 2009. All rights reserved.