Help Desk and
Academic Computing

at Sarah Lawrence College

H: Drive Access

What is the H: Drive?

Your network or H: drive (a.k.a. home directory) is a mapped drive on SLC3, which is one of the College’s servers. It behaves like a hard drive, allowing you to save files to it. On campus, the address for a person’s network drive is:

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Topics: backup, faculty, fix, h drive, learn, network storage, staff, student

H: Drive Access for Windows 2000/XP

To configure your Windows2000/XP PC to connect to the network (H:) drive:

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Topics: backup, faculty, h drive, learn, network storage, staff, student

H: Drive Access for Mac OS X

To map a network drive in Mac OS X:

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Topics: backup, faculty, h drive, learn, network storage, staff, student

H: Drive Access Off Campus

H: Drive access is now available from off campus using FTP. These instructions can also be used to connect and upload files to your Pages web space. If you are uploading web files make sure that you either set public_html as the path or move all of your files into the public_html folder; this is the only folder that your files will be accessible on the web from. Your web address will then be http://pages.slc.edu/~jdoe, where jdoe is your network username.

Jump to specific instructions for: Mac OS X | Windows

General Instructions:

Enter the following information into your FTP client (e.g. SmartFTP, WS_FTP, CyberDuck) to access your H: drive or web space from off campus:

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Topics: backup, faculty, h drive, learn, network storage, student

Backup

Your data is not secure if it only exists in one place. Hard drives, CDs, DVDs, flash drives, etc., will all fail eventually. To ensure the safety of your data, you must back up.

Backing up is simple: make a copy of the file(s) on another medium. If you store documents on your computer hard drive, copy them to a USB flash drive or burn a CD or DVD on a regular basis. Important school documents should be copied to your network drive.

If you back up monthly, you will never lose more than one month’s work. Critical work should be backed up at least daily!

Topics: backup, faculty, h drive, learn, network storage, recommendations, staff, student

Password Requirements

Effective fall 2006 all passwords on the Academic Network must be a minimum of 6 characters in length and should include one numeral or special character.

Some suggestions include:

  • Make the Password at Least Six Characters Long – The longer the password is, the better.
  • Mix Upper and Lower Case Letters – Passwords are case-sensitive.
  • Mix Letters and Numbers – Add numbers to passwords, especially in the middle (not just at the beginning or the end).
  • Include Non-Alphanumeric Characters – Special characters such as &, $, and > are acceptable.
  • Pick a Password You Can Remember – The best password in the world does you no good if you forget it.

Topics: backup, email, faculty, fix, h drive, learn, network storage, policies, student

SLC’s Academic Network

Sarah Lawrence College’s Academic Network provides access to the Internet and other online resources. If you do not own a computer, you may use PCs, Macs, and printers located in the library and Heimbold Visual Arts Center. Use of the SLC network and SLC computers are governed by the Acceptable Use Policy.

To access the SLC network, you will need a SLC network account. Incoming students will be provided network credentials during the summer prior to orientation or at orientation. Usernames and passwords will not be changed in an arbitrary manner at any time by SLC staff. Under no circumstances will network credentials or email addresses be provided over the phone.

Topics: backup, faculty, h drive, learn, network storage, policies, student

Network Requirements

Access to the SLC wired network is supported for computers that have the following:

  1. Windows XP, Vista or OS X
  2. 10/100/1000 Mbps Ethernet card and Ethernet patch cable (not crossover cable) with DHCP enabled (default configuration).

We recommend bringing an ethernet cable that is at least 15 feet long, to ensure access to the wall jack.

Topics: backup, fix, h drive, learn, network storage, student