All Stories

man appearing to work on microchip

Maintenance of information technology systems will result in outages to some services in the early-morning hours from April 23 to May 5. IT Services selected this period because it is a time of reduced student activity and reduces the impact of service outages.

IT Services will use daily service windows to perform deferred maintenance and make required system configuration changes. The maintenance activities and affected systems will be announced via the IT Services System Status feed — and, if needed, targeted e-mails to affected parties. All services will be fully available each day by 8 a.m.

Critical or broad-reaching system changes are scheduled for the regular Thursday maintenance windows, while minor and less disruptive changes will occur Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday. IT Services is aware that there are still some academic activities occurring until Apr 26 and will take care to avoid impact to those events.

Anyone who has a special event scheduled during this break requiring the affected services to be operational before 8 a.m. must contact the ServiceDesk at 519-253-3000, ext. 4440, so that IT Services can conduct maintenance activity around the event.

The pre-planning stage is wrapping up in the next four weeks and we are on-track for the first departmental rollouts in late May. The deployment will go  department-by-department with planning meetings with key people in each department, followed by a customized plan for each department that will include training presentations and demonstrations as required.

  • The campus-wide Readiness Survey for all faculty and staff is ready to go.
  • Technical presentations have been presented to campus technicians and staff in IT Servces
  • Demonstration computers are setup for the various use cases (single user, multiple user (shared), classroom computer, lab computer) at IT Services to help with technical training and testing
  • Daily News article and campus-wide faculty+staff email to be sent

Microsoft has changed their Imagine Program (formerly known as DreamSpark) for computer science, math and engineering students. The new Azure for Students program provides:

  • Credits for cloud-based services including virtual servers, storage, Kubernetes containers, databases, AI and machine learning API's and more
  • Access to software tools such as Visual Studio, SQL Server and the Windows operating system

You must have a current, active Azure for Students subscription in order to access the Software Developer Tools. You can download this software in the Education Hub after you have activated your Azure account.

Learning material can be found in the Azure portal and at Microsoft Learn and lynda.com which are also free for UWindsor students.

The Windows 10 1903 update will be reaching most users in late May and June of 2019 and is one of the regular semi-annual updates to Windows 10.  The update will be automatically downloaded and installed as per your computer's update settings.

Here are the highlights..

A new Light Theme is available that will change the colour of the taskbar and other elements to a lighter colour.  Windows 10 has had Dark Theme available for a while, but now you can lighten up the bottom black bar.

Focus Assist supresses distractions while you are duplicating your display. A new rule is available that will disable notifications while the current app is in full screen mode.

Search is being separated from Cortana.  When you search in the taskbar, you will now be searching only in files on the PC and will not be given Internet recommendations. Cortana, Microsoft's digital assitant can still be accessed by a separate icon.

Windows Sandbox is a new secure environment that allows you to run apps without making changes to your files. Sandbox works like a built-in virtual machine running Windows 10, but every time you close it, all changes that you make are automatically removed. You may use it to run any executable file to block it from interacting with the underlying operating system. In other words: what happens in Windows Sandbox stays in Windows Sandbox.

And more...

  • The Start menu is being streamlined (faster, less colour, and smaller with less tiles)
  • More functionality to view contents of the clipboard

Panellists with first-hand experience of the challenges of online research will discuss how they responded to these problems effectively and ethically during the two-jour workshop “Online Research: Challenges and Ethical Solutions,” Thursday, March 21, at 1 p.m. in the Oak Room, Vanier Hall.

Representatives from the research software company Qualtrics will present on its survey platform, and along with officials from the Research Ethics Board and Information Technology Services, will answer questions on supports available to help researchers find success with online projects.

To register, email Joan.Craig@uwindsor.ca.