Personal Folder Space
Every full-time faculty member has a personal folder on a drive
(usually the H: drive) that is backed up on a daily basis on the
A & S network. You can save important files to this folder instead
of to your hard drive, or you can use it to back up important files.
You should be able to access this folder when you log on to any
A & S computer, including those in the multimedia classrooms.
If your computer is not configured to use ASNet, please contact
Paul Jarnagin.
Departmental Shared Drives
Each department has a folder on the S: drive that can be accessed
by all full-time faculty members in that department. You will be able
to see the folders of other departments but cannot access their
contents. This folder is useful for sharing documents and other files
to which more than one person needs access. As with your personal
folder, you should be able to access this folder when you log on to
any A & S computer, including those in the multimedia classrooms.
If your computer is not configured to use ASNet, please contact
Paul Jarnagin.
Off-campus Remote Access
You may be able access your office computer from other computers,
called remote access. With Remote Desktop on Windows XP Professional,
which should be on your office computer, you can have access to a
Windows session that is running on your office computer when you are
at another computer. This means, for example, that you can connect to
your work computer from home and have access to all of your
applications, files, and network resources as though you were in
front of your computer at work. You can leave programs running at
work and when you get home, you can see your office computers
desktop displayed on your home computer with the same programs
running.
To use Remote Desktop to connect from your home computer
to your office computer, complete the following steps. These
steps should only need to be done once.
- Your office computer must be running Windows XP
Professional with Service Pack 2 as well as a connection
to a Local Area Network (LAN) or the Internet. For more information
about Local Area Networks, please visit the following Wikipedia site
by clicking
here.
- Your home computer must be running Windows XP Home or
Professional, have Remote Desktop
Connection installed, and have access to a LAN via modem or
Virtual Private Network (VPN). For more information about
Virtual Private Networks, please visit the following Wikipedia site
by clicking
here. More information on using the UA VPN to connect to
your office computer using an on-campus wireless access point
can be found by clicking
here.
- On your office computer, select Start and right-click
on My Computer. Select Properties. Select the Remote tab.
Below the Remote Desktop heading, check the box next to
Allow users to connect remotely to this computer
and then write down the full computer name. Finally, select OK.
- It is not required that you have a VPN connection to connect to
your office computer from
home; however, you will need a LAN connection. If you choose to
use the VPN on your home computer, you must both register
your Bama email account and create a VPN connection. Visit the
HelpDesk to complete these steps.
The following steps will allow you to connect to your office computer
from your home computer and will need to be repeated each time that you
wish to do so.
- If you decided not to use the VPN connection from home, then you
should skip this step and go to the next one. Otherwise, you may
recognize this step as having been completed at the end of the
steps for creating a VPN connection, but it will need to be repeated
each time you
log on to the UA VPN, so it is included here also. If you created an
icon for the UA VPN on your desktop when you
created your VPN account, then double-click the icon. Otherwise,
select Start, Connect To, (possibly Show all connections), then
double-click the UA VPN icon. Log on with your Bama email account
user name and password.
- Select Start. Select Run. Type the command
mstsc, without parentheses, and select OK to access the
Remote Desktop Connection. Alternatively, you may select Start, All
Programs, Accessories, (possibly Communications), then Remote Desktop
Connection. At the prompt,
type the full computer name of your office computer and select
Connect.
- You will then be asked to Log On to Windows. Enter your user name
and password for your office computer and select OK. You are now
connected to your work computer from your home computer through
the LAN (and, if you chose the option, the VPN).
When you connect to your computer at work
from another computer,
Remote Desktop automatically locks the computer so no one
else can access your applications and files while you are gone.
You may terminate the Remote Desktop Connection from your home
computer by moving your mouse pointer to the top of the screen and selecting
the small X from the right-hand side of the trapezoidal
tab. If you initiated a VPN connection on your home computer, then you
should also terminate it: simply select Start, then Connect To,
right-click on the VPN connection, and finally Disconnect.
You may terminate the Remote
Desktop Connection from your computer at work by typing CTRL+ALT+DEL
and then typing in your user name and password.