Michael Dominok wrote: > [Snipped Horrorstory (by Gnu Raiz)] > Gnu Raiz wrote: > > Oh if your curious about what University I attend it's > > the University of Memphis, not that it makes any > > difference. > > Is this typical for US-universities?
*Sigh*...it certainly is at mine. Almost all the labs are Windows-only, but a few proudly sport fancy new Macs. Of course, even the Macs run Microsoft products (particularly MS-Office). Many people have no idea that Firefox is installed on the computers and use IE exclusively. And they blame the fact that the network isn't secure on IRC--it's forbidden without special permission, and yet they allow people to send and receive MS Office files over the Internet and use Outlook Express! Oh, and they require professors to set up websites sites on a lovely online program called Blackboard, which is not only proprietary software but also clearly just *bad* (I know several students with physical handicaps who simply can't use it because it breaks their screen readers). And to top it all off, if you seek support for anything computer-related and it comes out you use Linux, the support folks just assume that you don't need help after all (even if it's a hardware problem) because you're clearly a "computer wizard." I've managed to get a few professors to recognize some accessibility problems with the website thing and also to start sending files in open formats such as PDFs and text (because it really is inconvenient to go to the library or a computer lab just to read my email), but for the most part everything computer-related on campus is just bad news. And it kind of puts me in a bad situation because I advocate/am active in a lot of groups on a lot of different issues, so with the computer stuff on top of everything else I kind of get seen sometimes as "that girl who complains about everything," since my school does have some serious accessibility issues in general. In non-computer realms, however, it's an amazing school. Very progressive, even. *Shrug* Amy P.S.: They start the MS training early. When I was in high school, they offered classes on how to become "Microsoft Office Certified" or some such nonsense. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]