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Students face connectivity problems with campus Wi-Fi network eduroam
Internet quality on NC State’s campus has become an issue among students as the eduroam network continues having connectivity trouble.
Anina Parker, second-year studying political science, said she has experienced network issues with eduroam on several occasions, saying it frequently disconnects from her computer.
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“It will go in and out, and I will try everything to get it to work, but it just doesn’t,” Parker said.
Greg James, director of Network Services of Communication Technologies, said it does not appear to be a widespread connectivity issue that the Office of Information Technology has observed or that students have reported.
“In general, our bandwidth is more than adequate for anything that we should be doing via Wi-Fi,” James said. “There could potentially be areas where there’s a lot of devices trying to connect to a singular [access point], but there does not appear to be a systemic problem that we’ve seen.”
James said there have been six Wi-Fi outages between eduroam and other wireless networks since the beginning of the academic year.
“Those outages lasted from a few minutes to several hours, and they have been from various unique causes,” James said. “One time one of our controllers rebooted. It just happened. There wasn’t any human intervention.”
Aside from the outages, students continue to have difficulties connecting to the network, which has led them to resort to using unprotected and unencrypted networks such as “NCSU” and “NCSUguest.” Anastasia Katsiada, a third-year studying political science, said this is what she does when she has a hard time connecting to eduroam.
Emma Mori, a first-year in exploratory studies, said the issue with eduroam occurs nearly every day, although it generally just takes a minute or two before she is able to reconnect. She said she
Moms
continued from page 4 free, pro-bono filings for the 501c3.”
Despite Free Moms’ growing popularity, Nelson said she still makes it a priority to get to know students on a personal level and to be able to know them by name.
“There was one girl who was from way out west, and she asked us why we were also sees other students struggling to connect with eduroam on social media. doing this,” Nelson said. “We told her it’s really unconditional love. We just want to shift the atmosphere at this school with unconditional love. Then she started crying and she said ‘I just miss my family so much.’ She just kept saying over and over again, ‘Do you have any idea how important this is?’”
“I know a lot of people have issues, and then I see on the NCSU [Snapchat] page that a bunch of people are like, ‘Why is the internet not working?’ and that happens probably at least once a week,” Mori said.
Parker said the Office of Information Technology needs to work on tackling this issue, especially considering how an unreliable internet connection can result in a faulty grade for an online homework or test submission.
She wasn’t the only one touched by Free Moms’ mission.
Julia Storch, a fourth-year studying
“I think that [the Office of Information Technology] should continue to work on it so that students don’t have the added stress of not being able to connect to the internet on top of assignment due dates because everything is online now,” Parker said.
James said it’s hard for the Office of Information Technology to say what is causing connectivity issues because there haven’t been any reports on it. He said it is important for students to contact the office whenever they are experiencing issues with eduroam so the chemistry, said she discovered Free Moms through Yik Yak. Storch said Free Moms found her at the right time last semester when she could really use a hug.
“I use Yik Yak and people were talking about Free Moms being out here today, … and I actually didn’t know they were a thing,” Storch said. “I was really sad at the time and they do the whole free hug thing, so it was a big comfort for me.”
Nelson said the volunteers have done an office can be aware of a problem as it comes up.
“It’s very important that the students experiencing these issues of connectivity, that they reach out to the help desk,” James said. “But if we don’t know about them on an individual basis, it’s hard for us to determine if there’s something wrong with the system itself.” incredible job of reaching out. Even those who were on the timid side when first joining the group eventually warmed up and really got to connect with the students.
Students, faculty and staff experiencing IT issues should report to the Office of Information Technology Help Desk, by visiting help.ncsu.edu or calling 919515-HELP (4357).
“It’s easy to love people in your comfort zone, but getting outside your comfort zone is where God can really show up,” Nelson said. “That’s what we see. When you are doing the unconditional love thing, it changes you and it also changes [the students].”