Archive
Archive for the ‘e-infrastructure’ Category
Skydrive@uncc.edu
2011/09/27
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- Ninermail’s live@edu implementation includes SkyDrive, Microsoft’s cloud document sharing and collaboration solution,
- Log in with your UNCC credentials at http://skydrive.live.com:

- OK, you may have to reset your password, then log in:
Categories: e-infrastructure, Glitches&Errors
live@edu, MS-OneDrive
How to play unplayable DVDs with VideoLan VLC-Player
2011/09/24
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If you run into problems playing a DVD video – either since there is no (non-free up to Windows XP) DVD-decoder installed on your computer, or since the DVD was not mastered properly for your DVD-playing software – and if you have VideoLan VLC-Player installed – like on the teacher computer in the LRC main classroom–, you can work around these issues by right-clicking on the Video_TS.vob file – which you will presumably find in the Video_TS subfolder if you browse your DVD as a disk with Windows Explorer (usually drive D: – you may haveto bypass your default DVDS playing software to get in there– and choose from the context menu either directly to “Play with VLC” or via “Open with”, like in this screenshot:
Categories: e-infrastructure
copyright, DVD, DVDs, video, videolan, vlc-player
How not to book LRC equipment: Scheduling conflicts
2011/09/23
3 comments
- Do not send a meeting request to an item for a time when the item has a prior meeting request.
- The tab: scheduling assistant within the meeting request you edit is there to tell you when items have prior meeting requests.

- A “blocked” timeline denotes a prior meeting request: The item has already been booked (solid block) or requested (hatched block) during the start and end time of your meeting. Do not crash their party.
- “blank” timeline means “item is free”. Go ahead: You can request a meeting with this item between your start and end time.
- Once you have this overview, you can easily remove, by right-clicking on the resource, extra resources that you cannot book or could, but which you do not need:

- Once the university has mail-enabled your cloud-accounts on campus, we will have a computer decline such conflicting requests automatically, and force you to start over with a new meeting request. It will be still worth your while memorizing the above: You can save time and avoid disappointment.
Exchange 2010 and Live@edu: How to use resource calendar publishing to implement a help desk timetable and signup sheet
2011/09/22
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- Calendar sharing with students that have only cloud accounts in live@edu requires them to be mail-enabled users in on-premise AD and only works if a users privileged to share shares with individuals through the GUI (in our circumstances: no groups, no PowerShell access).
- Workaround to share resource calendar information is: publish calendars to the internet. This needs careful consideration of privacy issues, but Exchange 2010 provides you with a number of helpful options, including “availability only”.
- If you publish, you can easily generate the links from the resource mailbox name, and manage large sets of calendars e.g. in an MS-Excel Web app.
- As you can see in the below LRCTutor12 calendar subscribed to in either OWA or Windows Live, the Exchange 2010 ICS does not seem to provide the calendar name, users have to update it manually (maybe use the resource mailbox account name from the calendar URL).
![student-internet-calendar-in-owa-error_thumb[2] student-internet-calendar-in-owa-error_thumb[2]](https://thomasplagwitz.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/student-internet-calendar-in-owa-error_thumb2_thumb.png?w=526&h=287)
- If you “hack” resource calendars to be a help desk timetable (support personnel, like lab assistants/tutors, one calendar per language, sharing the support role), and have personnel update their availability with late-breaking changes through their Outlook calendars (“cancel this occurrence”) and automatically get these changes pushed out to all users over the internet.
- You can also “hack” a signup sheet “on steroids”:
- enforce a MaximumDurationInMinutes suitable for a sign-up appointment duration)
- set the AutomateProcessing option to AutoUpdate,
- accept the meeting requests of lab assistants/tutors at term start, so that they appear as solid blocks in the calendar, and advise clients trying to sign-up that only 1 client can sign-up during any given solid block with the office.
- Then ignore meeting requests of clients during the term (but communicate the rule to clients: only one client can sign up for support from the “office” during any given time slot. There is in my knowledge no way to set a number in Exchange 2010. Neither MaximumConflictInstances nor ResourceCapacity are applicable). The client meeting requests will remain tentative and appear hatched in the calendar for any other client to see.
- It is advisable to publish the calendar not with “Availability” only, but with “Limited Detail”, so that additional information (office hours dedicated to specific support topics/clinics, specific requests by clients) can be passed back and forth between support personnel and clients (and anything is better than “Free/Busy” which is especially misleading for such office calendars). Note that even if OrganizerInfo is included on-premise, it seems not included on calendars published to the internet (option “public”; “restricted” has not been tested), which makes Limited Detail possible in our environment.
- Publishing the calendar to the internet with “Full details” could be used for passing additional information, like special handling instructions to student workers,
- like this:
(this is the publically viewable HTML – oddly) - This notes passing does not work with cloud-accounts that are subscribed to the calendar ICS that are not mail-enabled in AD: no notes field gets through to them in OWA)
- But the one-size-fits-all approach is unsatisfactory. If the group of student workers is small, it could (once mail-enabled in AD) be shared the calendar with instead.
- incidentally, what happens with the organizer field under “full details”
- Ìt appears that a calendar can not simultaneously be published "public" and "restricted" (need to know the obscure URL), let alone with different levels of information included.
Protected: Exchange 2010 Resource Mailboxes: Running Log
2011/09/22
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Printing Problems in the LRC
2011/09/22
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- One problem
- Another problem
- Received this error, repeatedly with students trying from different LC computers.
- Until I told her to save the document (I thought she was authoring it), log out and log in on a different computer. Then miraculously she could print.
- Now I am left wondering: Did she open the document, maybe from Moodle, in her web browser, and the MS-Word browser plugin is not set up to print too our printer. Would be not a solution, but a workaround for this situation.
MS-Exchange 2010 and OWA: Set Resource Calendar Response messages for Automateprocessing
2011/09/21
1 comment
LRC Outlook/Exchange 2010 Resource Calendaring: How students can view resource "Calendars from the Internet" in web browser and OWA
2011/09/20
5 comments
- Want a shorter version?
- Students, unless specifically TBA:invited, will encounter a permission problem when trying to view calendars like staff.
- Instead, students can use the scheduling assistant to view a basic version of the resource’s calendar. This works “out of the box”.
- Students can also view an advanced version of the resource’s calendars (one-time, or bookmark this link in your web browser – hope you know how to synch your bookmarks between all the devices you use…). This requires little work: click on the “view” link in the “student calendar” column of our list of LRC resources that you can book or check out, to see the current calendar in your web browser:

- For students who check the calendar of a resource regularly (e.g. to see when the LRC main classroom is available for your self-access/the tutor in your language, for help), it is better to “bookmark” the resources’ calendars in NINERMAIL. Here is how:
- Copy the URL for the calendar you just opened, from the web browser address bar:

- Go to NINERMAIL, click on the lower left “Calendar-icon”
to unfold the “My Calendars” list
in the left pane, then right-click on “My Calendars”, choose “Add Calendar”
. - In the “Calendar URL” field, paste URL of the calendar you just opened, but replace “html” at the end with “ics”:
, click “OK”. - For on-premise users in OWA (seems OWA stirs on-premise users to the superior intranet calendars, which would be good. But what if the intranet calendar has not been shared with this user, but internet sharing is intended?), This may not work as advertised (neither with protocol http and webcal) OR just need a lot of time (~12hours?) to synchronize,
while it works (both with protocol http and webcal) when subscribing from Windows Live?
. Most importantly for us (as we have now tested), it works for students with accounts in the cloud from NINERMAI. - OWA remembers your internet calendar subscriptions, and you can easily display or hide them, using the checkboxes it provides. To keep an overview over your calendars added from the internet, you need to rename them, by right-clicking on them, like so:



