LRC Outlook/Exchange 2010 Resource Calendaring: How to cancel meetings in OWA
2011/08/30
4 comments
- View instead a short screencast how to cancel meeting requests in OWA.
- Or: You start out with a meeting request conversation like this, showing:
- a request send from account LRC help (example)
- an accepted meeting response from the resource (e.g. the room) account
- to cancel that meeting, you can go to your (!) calendar in OWA,
- select (click on) the meeting and choose “delete”
- either from the context menu after right-click the meeting
- or from the ribbon after selecting the meeting
- if the meeting was repeating/recurring, you will be given the option to
- either from the context menu after right-click the meeting
- select (click on) the meeting and choose “delete”
- you can also just open the meeting and choose from the top menu the “Cancel meeting” button, then press menu button: “Send update”:
- After the cancellation has gone through, this is how the results will look like in the e-paper trail:
LRC Outlook/Exchange 2010 Resource Calendaring: How staff view resource “Calendars from your organization” in OWA
2011/08/30
6 comments
- Note: Students that have not been specifically invited to share a calendar, must use (staff may also) this approach to view calendars, to avoid a permission problem .
- Staff can load resource calendars, but as somebody who books the resource (except where you still cannot book/schedule/sign up: Tutors), you normally neither need nor want to (unless you manage the resources).
- To preview the free/busy schedule of the resource, use the scheduling assistant instead.
- To make sure that you have booked the resource, load your OWN calendar instead: Since it is you who “meets” with the resource, your meeting will be reflected on there. If you also loaded the resource’s calendar, you would see your “meeting” twice. A meeting always appears in the calendar of all “participants” – only that, other than for resource calendars, you normally do not view the calendar of the other participants who are “human resources”(or maybe you are, at least in the scheduling assistant, but not with details beyond “busy”).

- You may want to load the resource calendar to learn details about the other “meetings”of the resource (e.g. which conflicting meeting organizer you can contact in an emergency, or to know how many tentative meeting requests are already pending for a tutor). Below is how:
How best to fit your class into the Sanako Study1200 Classroom Layout
2011/08/25
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- When started, the Study1200 Tutor will prompt for the classroom layout (computer and student icons in the right part of the Sanako window) that you want to load, like so:

- We have 2 classroom layouts preconfigured for common uses of the LRC
- “right-half”: only the right half, as viewed by the teacher, of the coed434 main classroom. If you come with smaller classes (<16), this will fit relatively nicely onto the screen.
- “template class” = all that can fit onto the screen which means:To fit students (and, more importantly, the reasonably sized thumbnails of their desktops) onto the screen (Sanako Tutor will not span both screens, at least not if they have different resolutions), we had to
- take the main classroom COED434

- break out the front 2 rows, break them apart in the middle, and turn them counterclockwise, like so:


- to achieve the following result in the Study 1200 classroom layout:
thumbnails of the 2 front rows barely fit the layout, remaining computers from the rear row are cluttering the bottom of the classroom layout. This severely limits the usefulness of this great feature, and is counter-intuitive, which is twice as bad when standing in front of (or here rather: behind) a class. We are working on getting a bigger secondary screen on the teacher podium. Since we will also eventually need more Sanako licenses to equip the whole classroom. So the secondary screen should be as big as we can possibly get for the podium: 1900*1200 would be 1.75 times what we have now. - To simplify this while we wait, we have numbered the seats (rather: the monitors) in the LRC according to the computer numbers. In the Study-1200 classroom layout, you can show the computer (names which end in these) numbers instead of the the student login names, by going to menu: tools / admin / change student names.
- if you classroom configuration changes,
- you can change the layout by reloading a preconfigured classroom layout file, like so:

- you can alter the layout on the right on the fly, by CTRL-SHIFT dragging student/computer icons
- If you have done this, on exiting, the study1200 tutor will ask you whether you want to save your changes to the layout. Feel free to do this, as longs as you save them in your personal tutor folder. Please do not overwrite existing layouts for all teachers.
- Classroom layouts are stored with the extension CCF, but are simply XML files. To preview or even edit them, You can open them in your preferred XML editor, like so in MS-Excel:

Just testing the post by email
2011/08/25
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This appears to be a Trados error. Does it appear on every startup? On each Coed434 PC? We have to investigate.

Categories: Glitches&Errors, Student-Computers, translation-software
imaging, sdl-trados
Sanako Study 1200 screen sharing: How students can present their computer-based work to the entire class from their seats
2011/08/25
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- Do you assign computer projects – web quests, writing tasks – to students on the LRC computers, and do you want each of them to present his/her project work to the entire class?
- You can save a fair amount of (precious class) time (and of distracting commotion), if you use the Sanako classroom management system’s screen sharing features.
- Rather than having students walk up (the “pedestrian” approach), transfer their work to (e.g. reopen their website or MS-Word on) the teacher computer and present it from there to the class –
- students can remain in their seats/on their computers, if you use one of these two approaches:
- to show the students’ work on the classroom projector screen:
- Click on the student’s icon in the classroom layout, from the popup-window, choose button: “Remote Control”

- a new window showing the student’s screen opens up: drag it to the projected screen and maximize it: ready to roll…
- to show the students’ work on the audience’s computer screens:
- from the center buttons, open the submenu of button “screen control” , choose submenu item “model student”

- (to avoid affecting self access students in the LRC, you may want to group all your students into one color group, and then work with the colored left parts of the center buttons, instead o the grey right parts),
- with the altered mouse cursor, click on the student icon in the classroom layout that you want to become the model student
- the other students’ icons (either in the entire class or in the group affected, see above) in the classroom layout will change to the icon denoting “receiving model student”:
. ready to roll…
Categories: audience-is-teachers
model-student, remote-control, sanako-study-1200
LRC website homepage updated to included LRC newsfeeds
2011/08/25
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We have added newsfeeds to the most recent LRC news for students and teachers to the UNCC-LRC homepage, in the hope that our clients will find it easier to learn about new LRC features for language learning.
Categories: audience-is-students, audience-is-teachers, e-infrastructure, websites
joomla, newsfeed, rss, website
Room and Equipment handling using MS-Exchange Resource Mailboxes: What the parameter AddNewRequestsTentatively means
2011/08/22
1 comment
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It is an instruction to the calendarattendant, that seems to be conjured up by automateprocessing: autoupdate, but also, now together with, but still separate from, the resource booking assistant, by automateprocessing: autoaccept
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It is an instruction relating only to meeting requests, not to meetings. But it is not the calendarattendant, but rather the resource booking assistant that decides what is to remain a request and what not (= what is to be accepted or denied, and thus to stop being a mere request and be promoted to a meeting). if there are no (mere) requests (since all requests, for whatever other settings, are either auto-accepted or auto-denied, so effectively automatically rendered into non-(not anymore) requests, the AddNewRequestsTentatively will have no effect on the calendar. It is these other settings, that may allow requests to remain requests. Even though the parameter name may sound like it is doing this, it is NOT AddNewRequestsTentatively that will turn off/override these other settings to make all incoming requests remain requests. It is rather automateprocessing: autoupdate (or a combination of automateprocessing: autoaccept and allbookinpolicy: $false and Allrequestinpolicy: $true (and even more so AllRequestOutOfPolicy: $true) that would do that.
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However, the latter is the combination if have for pseudo-rooms where it is important that the delegate can collate requests in a calendar-format when deciding which to accept/deny, instead of having to cobble together a picture from forwarded meeting request messages.
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Room and Equipment handling using MS-Exchange Resource Mailboxes: What the parameter AllowConflict means
2011/08/22
1 comment
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NOT TRUE HERE? More info here, search “AllowConflicts”.
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what will the effect be on non-recurring meeting requests? Will conflict in.stances (there are only instances with non-recurring meeting requests) still be denied? From the flowchart and when allowconflicts comes into play (only after automateprocessing: autoaccept (it does not come into play with automateprocessing:autoupdate) immediately before thresholds ) and that it still does not allow actual conflicts, it appears to me that allowconflicts should have been called “allow-a-recurring-meeting-request-to-be-not-outright-denied-if-it-has-conflict-instances-that-have-to-be-denied-(always-by-the-autoaccept-agent)-as-long-as-not-the-ConflictPercentageAllowed-and-MaximumConflictInstances-numbers-are-also-exceeded”. it was, however, with good reason not called: “allowdoublebooking” J
- That much about the theory. Now the Test results for AllowConflicts $true
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What works: Allowconflicts does not prompt the autoprocessing: autoaccept (calendar booking assistant) to allow actual conflict instances (double bookings)) from recurring meeting requests.
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What does not seem to work, but is not important right now: thresholds for conflict amounts are ignored, even if both are crossed
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MaximumConflictInstances= 5
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ConflictPercentageAllowed= 25% guides the calendar booking assistant in deciding whether a recurring meeting request gets
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(10 conflict instances out of 20) still get accepted,
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![owa test AddNewRequestsTentatively true automateprocessing not autoupdate maxduration outfofpolicy lrc calendar this looks not tentative_thumb[1] owa test AddNewRequestsTentatively true automateprocessing not autoupdate maxduration outfofpolicy lrc calendar this looks not tentative_thumb[1]](https://thomasplagwitz.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/owa-test-addnewrequeststentatively-true-automateprocessing-not-autoupdate-maxduration-outfofpol3.png?w=142&h=55)


