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Issue date: 10/8/08 Section: News

Printing from a laptop at Van Pelt? Not just a dream

ISC developing wireless network so students can use school's printers from personal computers

Monisha Chakravarthy

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Students work in Van Pelt from their laptops, which may soon be connectable to University printing servers.
Media Credit: Daniel Schwartz/DP File Photo
Students work in Van Pelt from their laptops, which may soon be connectable to University printing servers.

The days of students sending files to themselves and waiting in line for computers at Van Pelt may finally be over.

Information Systems and Computing is working on configuring a wireless network that would allow students to print directly from their personal computers to Penn-networked printers in libraries and academic buildings.

Doug Smullens, a library computing support specialist, said the project evolved from student concerns about campus printing policies. Developments in wireless technology and printing software have now made it possible to address that concern, he said.

No date has been set for the service's launch, said John MacDermott, ISC director for instructional technology, though officials hope to have the project completed this semester.

Students will be able to download a copy of Uniprint software from each location's computing Web site, which includes both the application that allows for interaction with the school's printer system, as well as the drivers for every printer managed by that site, MacDermott said.

Students can then hit the "Print" button, and - no matter where they are on Penn's campus - choose what printer they want to print to, so long as they have that printer's download package.

Students will then have two hours to go to that printing location and release the job by swiping their PennCard and identifying their documents on the print queue. Printing from school printers will still charge a student's PennCash account.

College senior Rafaela Zuidema said the new system would save her a lot of time.

"Right now, I have to come all the way [to Van Pelt], and sometimes the computers are full and sometimes they're really slow," she said. "But this would speed things up a lot."

MacDermott said ISC is working to make the system uniform across campus by using the same software and standardizing printer names and prices.

Still, every school will continue to manage its own printers.

Although the new service had been scheduled for release before the start of the semester, a miscommunication between the schools put the initiative behind schedule.
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