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View Full Version : Can I avoid buying a windows laptop?! I want a mac.




brobson
Aug 19, 2004, 05:32 AM
I have all my AOL saved favorite lessons (art teacher) on my imac and for some reason can't get them on my windows computers.

I was all set to buy an ibook but found out our school isn't set up for wireless.
The apple salesperson says that means I can't plug my eternet cable into the school's internet (digital) line?

I guess I could make desktop copies of each lesson page and transfer them that way but what a pain.

Any advice? I am about to give up and get a windows which I don't want!

Brenda in Dallas

:confused:



yellow
Aug 19, 2004, 06:34 AM
I think you need some more info on your school's network. Windows and Macs can definitely co-exist on the same network via ethernet.

zim
Aug 19, 2004, 07:08 AM
The school should be accommodating to you, the teacher. Do not let them force you into something that will make you feel uncomfortable about you job.

Mac's do not need to be wireless, they have ethernet as well.

Macmaniac
Aug 19, 2004, 07:12 AM
I have all my AOL saved favorite lessons (art teacher) on my imac and for some reason can't get them on my windows computers.

I was all set to buy an ibook but found out our school isn't set up for wireless.
The apple salesperson says that means I can't plug my eternet cable into the school's internet (digital) line?

I guess I could make desktop copies of each lesson page and transfer them that way but what a pain.

Any advice? I am about to give up and get a windows which I don't want!

Brenda in Dallas

:confused:

I am kinda confused, so u download lessons off the internet using AOL, and you cannot move them between computers?
Also the Apple Sales rep sounds pretty stupid, if your school network has ethernet jacks then you should be fine, the iBooks have an ethernet jack so you can surf, you don't need wireless to surf. Check out the general forum which has a guide to Windows and Mac networking, we need some more info about your situation.

scottwat
Aug 19, 2004, 07:26 AM
The best way to handle this is make friends with your network guy. I have worked at several schools and we didn't use what is called DHCP this is thing on your network at school that assigns your computer the information it needs to be on the network. If it does use DHCP, then you should just be able to plug the ethernet cable into the ethernet port. Now you wont be using your aol dial up, but you should be able to get into your aol from there, I dont know exactly how, you may need to call aol or someone who uses AOL here could tell you. Now if the school doesnt use DHCP, the network guy will need to assign you an IP address. You can think of it like your home address. You have to have the IP address to send and recieve information just like you need a home address to send and recieve mail. They may or may not accomodate you in this. It depends on your network guy and how paranoid on security they are. But where I worked we liked it when teachers really wanted to do work and made sure they could.

jsw
Aug 19, 2004, 08:05 AM
What a bizarre thing for an Apple rep to say.

The fact that your school isn't wireless has nothing to do with your computer's ability to join the network. As others have said, an ethernet connection is an ethernet connection. So your iBook could connect physically to the network, no problem. To connect logically - i.e., to be recognized by the network - shouldn't take any more effort than it would with a Window's machine. Have you talked to the network people at the school? Do they seem competent? If so, there is no reason I can fathom as to why you could not get connected to the network there. None.

Now, this assumes that there is a network - ethernet ports - as opposed simply to digital phone lines. Do others plug in Windows laptops with no problems and access school files, Then it's an ethernet network.

Also, just out of curiosity, why do you need access to the network at school? If you already have your lessons, is there more on the network that you need access to?

BornAgainMac
Aug 19, 2004, 08:56 AM
Hook up a Airport Extreme to your ethernet port in your room and you can have wireless networking for both Windows and Mac based laptops.

brobson
Aug 19, 2004, 10:27 PM
Oh lordy, lordy I am confused. Thank you for your postings.

"I am kinda confused, so u download lessons off the internet using AOL, and you cannot move them between computers?"

Yes this began my dilema. I tried upgrading a 333 imac from 6gb to 60.
Bought Appleworks and still can't convert text even using RTF, word, html
It doesn't open hardly anything. It comes up massive letters. no sense.
I tried downloading to a mini harddrive and put it on the windows (files filled with lessons and sites) it said it couldn't find a way to open it.
:confused:

Anyway I decided to just buy a laptop, transfer them, and that would be that. JSW (thanks) got me all excited and ready to go buy and when I went to the apple store thats what they told me. I need a wireless rowter to tap into their line because it's digital. I can't just plug in a mac. I asked if I got an airport and plugged it in then went wireless wouldn't that do it? They said not if they aren't set up for wireless. Do I just need to talk to someone else there???
My computer guy at school said we aren't set up for wireless and the server won't accept Macintosh stuff that's sent.
This person is the dean of our 800 k-12 school and the computer guy.
It is very frustrating because he is so busy and doesn't seem very interested in Mac problems. I think if I approached him about an IP address he would fear I will cause him more work. Maybe not though. He just really isn't an expert.

"Also, just out of curiosity, why do you need access to the network at school? If you already have your lessons, is there more on the network that you need access to?"

I have to sign in their network don't I? They won't for instance let me check my email on AOL's homepage at school for fear of viruses.
I thought I could just plug in, go on AOL and avoid windows and their slow server too.

AmnesiacOpera
Aug 19, 2004, 10:54 PM
At the high school I attended, Macs were not allowed on the school network. The TV station at the school owned three Macs used for Final Cut Pro editing and we needed to get online to download updates. We got around this by talking to the network guys to open the network once a month after school just so we could download updates, but we were not allowed to stay on the network. The reason was that the school's network was running Novell, and they didn't want to buy licenses for Novell for mac.

Manzana
Aug 19, 2004, 10:59 PM
I can't just plug in a mac. I asked if I got an airport and plugged it in then went wireless wouldn't that do it? They said not if they aren't set up for wireless. Do I just need to talk to someone else there???
My computer guy at school said we aren't set up for wireless and the server won't accept Macintosh stuff that's sent.
This person is the dean of our 800 k-12 school and the computer guy.
It is very frustrating because he is so busy and doesn't seem very interested in Mac problems. I think if I approached him about an IP address he would fear I will cause him more work. Maybe not though. He just really isn't an expert.

I'm sorry Brobson, I just cringed when I read this. Unfortunately, this is an all too common occurrence and it's exacerbated by the fact that the dean/IT does not really know what's going on. I hate to say it, but it's true.

I work in a laboratory, and IT most of the time gets in the way when it comes to our lab computers. They do a great job on the business side, but are lousy when it comes to our labs, and sometimes we just don't expect them to be able to service all our needs as it takes forever just to get anything accomplished.

Ok, macs are great at living in windows networks. What I have done is just plug it in to the network and it automatically configures itself to the network, so it can access the net. I have plugged in windows, macs, and linux machines doing this. Actually configuring it within the network to access it's printers and servers actually does take more work.

I believe the reason they told you that a wireless solution would not work is because they are not willing to support it; they don't want to take the time to encrypt it and don't want to be broadcasting WI-FI due to security risks. I would not do this at work either as it might get me in some hot water.

brobson
Aug 19, 2004, 11:00 PM
At the high school I attended, Macs were not allowed on the school network. The TV station at the school owned three Macs used for Final Cut Pro editing and we needed to get online to download updates. We got around this by talking to the network guys to open the network once a month after school just so we could download updates, but we were not allowed to stay on the network. The reason was that the school's network was running Novell, and they didn't want to buy licenses for Novell for mac.


So that's it. We have Novell too.
Where does that leave me I wonder?

brobson
Aug 19, 2004, 11:03 PM
I'm sorry Brobson, I just cringed when I read this. Unfortunately, this is an all too common occurrence and it's exacerbated by the fact that the dean/IT does not really know what's going on. I hate to say it, but it's true.

I work in a laboratory, and IT most of the time gets in the way when it comes to our lab computers. They do a great job on the business side, but are lousy when it comes to our labs, and sometimes we just don't expect them to be able to service all our needs as it takes forever just to get anything accomplished.

Ok, macs are great at living in windows networks. What I have done is just plug it in to the network and it automatically configures itself to the network, so it can access the net. I have plugged in windows, macs, and linux machines doing this. Actually configuring it within the network to access it's printers and servers actually does take more work.

I believe the reason they told you that a wireless solution would not work is because they are not willing to support it; they don't want to take the time to encrypt it and don't want to be broadcasting WI-FI due to security risks. I would not do this at work either as it might get me in some hot water.

AmnesiacOpera
Aug 19, 2004, 11:06 PM
So that's it. We have Novell too.
Where does that leave me I wonder?

I would suggest talking to the IT guys at your school and see what they think. Sometimes even if your school doesn't use macs, a school in the district does (or the administration building for the district, depending on how big of a district you work for), and then they may have extra licenses lying around.

brobson
Aug 19, 2004, 11:21 PM
I meant to reply Manzana and not just quote your so here goes.
So do you all suggest I buy my ibook and cable and plug it in and see if it works? I could return it if it doesn't and it won't hurt the modem using the ethernet cable with a digital line? Forgive me for being redundant.
I have sent an email to 3 other computer saavy people at our school.
I am going to make sure we have an ethernet network.


Brenda

brobson
Aug 19, 2004, 11:25 PM
I would suggest talking to the IT guys at your school and see what they think. Sometimes even if your school doesn't use macs, a school in the district does (or the administration building for the district, depending on how big of a district you work for), and then they may have extra licenses lying around.


So you think my pluggin it in idea won't work with Novell?
I doubt seriously we have a license lying around because we are a small independant private school that is struggling financially.
Brenda

jsw
Aug 19, 2004, 11:27 PM
I have to sign in their network don't I? They won't for instance let me check my email on AOL's homepage at school for fear of viruses.
I thought I could just plug in, go on AOL and avoid windows and their slow server too.
I guess what I meant was that you don't sign in now, right? The iBook would still connect to projectors, monitors, etc. And I'm not sure you could get to AOL via the school's network anyway - can you do so on a Windows system now?

Of maybe you do need the Windows laptop to sign on. I guess in that case you could just keep the darned thing there for logging on for whatever reasons and still use the iBook for lessons.

God, it amazes me that people use Novell. It's just a hassle. Even where I work, which has one of the most confoundedly bizarre and anti-user IT environments I've seen, I can still get to the network when I bring my Mac PB in on occasion.

I'm still absolutely confused by the advice that you can't plug a Mac into the schools "digital" network. If it's a digital phone line or something else unusual, then, fine, understood. But if you can plug in a run-of-the-mill PC laptop, then it's ethernet, and your Mac will plug in too. In any event, you getting a wireless router isn't going to make a single bit of difference except, I guess, getting you to buy more stuff at the Apple Store. Seems pretty sleazy for an Apple salesperson, but I guess they come in all shapes and flavors. Either your iBook would plug in just as well as a router, or neither will plug in. All the router would do is give you a wireless link, which seems to be against school policy.

As to the network "not accepting Macintosh stuff that's sent"... that's more likely ignorance talking than reality, although I guess it can be the case in Novell networks.

maxterpiece
Aug 19, 2004, 11:30 PM
I meant to reply Manzana and not just quote your so here goes.
So do you all suggest I buy my ibook and cable and plug it in and see if it works? I could return it if it doesn't and it won't hurt the modem using the ethernet cable with a digital line? Forgive me for being redundant.
I have sent an email to 3 other computer saavy people at our school.
I am going to make sure we have an ethernet network.


Brenda
The apple store will usually charge you a 10% restocking fee for returning a computer that has been opened.

jsw
Aug 19, 2004, 11:52 PM
I meant to reply Manzana and not just quote your so here goes.
So do you all suggest I buy my ibook and cable and plug it in and see if it works? I could return it if it doesn't and it won't hurt the modem using the ethernet cable with a digital line? Forgive me for being redundant.
I have sent an email to 3 other computer saavy people at our school.
I am going to make sure we have an ethernet network.


Brenda
Just to be clear:

The modem only plugs into a standard phone jack. You can tell it's a standard phone jack by plugging in a cheap phone and listening for a dial tone. No dial tone? Don't plug your modem into it!

The Ethernet port (see below - click on the picture to see a slightly larger view) is a bit wider and takes a different cable. Generally, if an Ethernet cable will plug into an outlet and fits correctly, it's an Ethernet port. In such a case, plugging your Ethernet cable into that port and then your iBook (or vice versa - doesn't matter the order you use) should be fine.

AmnesiacOpera
Aug 19, 2004, 11:52 PM
So you think my pluggin it in idea won't work with Novell?
I doubt seriously we have a license lying around because we are a small independant private school that is struggling financially.
Brenda

Plugging it into a Novell network will not work unless they set up the network to allow it. At our school they wouldn't allow us to use a computer without Novell due to security reasons, and the school couldn't afford to buy licenses for macs.

jsw
Aug 19, 2004, 11:54 PM
Your home Mac has Ethernet, right? Could you bring it in and see if it works? Which OS is it running?

zim
Aug 20, 2004, 12:17 AM
If the school insists that you use a PC with windows, then make them get you one. You should not have to provide your own computer. If they they can't afford to buy faculty computers then they should provide an open network.

I am sure that there is a way you can transfer your files.

Vanilla
Aug 20, 2004, 02:20 AM
..Bought Appleworks and still can't convert text even using RTF, word, htmlIt doesn't open hardly anything. It comes up massive letters. no sense.I tried downloading to a mini harddrive and put it on the windows (files filled with lessons and sites) it said it couldn't find a way to open it..

Just a thought, but could the inability to open the files on a windows machine be due to a lack of suffixes on the files?? By that I mean ".DOC" for a word document ".XLS" for a spreadsheet etc. which are not required on a Mac but very much mandatory on a windows box.

If this is a silly thought or you have already thought of that, my apologies.
Vanilla

brobson
Aug 21, 2004, 02:14 PM
"You need an ethernet card; most of the new laptops have a combo card that is both a modem and an ethernet card. However, you will need to have the Novell Software loaded on your computer."


This is what my principal emailed me. I wasn't mentioning whether or not I was going to get a mac.

I can't ask them to buy me a computer or get a mac license because it is a want at this point not a need.

And Appleworks is supposed to change the suffixes right? Or do I have to change them manually?
Brenda

AmnesiacOpera
Aug 21, 2004, 04:27 PM
"You need an ethernet card; most of the new laptops have a combo card that is both a modem and an ethernet card. However, you will need to have the Novell Software loaded on your computer."


This is what my principal emailed me. I wasn't mentioning whether or not I was going to get a mac.

I can't ask them to buy me a computer or get a mac license because it is a want at this point not a need.

And Appleworks is supposed to change the suffixes right? Or do I have to change them manually?
Brenda

The iBook has an ethernet card that will work fine.

The only thing you would need is Novell for mac, if you wanted to connect to the network using the iBook. You could save your lesson plans to the iBook harddrive and bypass the school network completely, but you might consider the cost of the iBook to be too much to do just that.

As far as Appleworks, it SHOULD export the files so they are able to open on a windows machine. I haven't used Appleworks in months, and I don't have it on my Powerbook, so I can't test this to be certain.

gauched
Aug 21, 2004, 10:33 PM
The Novell client that you would probably need to connect to the schools network is here, if that helps:

Prosoft NetWare Client for Mac OS X (http://www.prosoftengineering.com/products/netware_client_x_educational_pricing.php)

Maybe your school already has a license for it, maybe not.

MacAficionado
Aug 21, 2004, 11:33 PM
If the school insists that you use a PC with windows, then make them get you one. You should not have to provide your own computer. If they they can't afford to buy faculty computers then they should provide an open network.

I am sure that there is a way you can transfer your files.


The only problem here is schools not being open enough. If they need you to have a Windows PC, then they should provide it. This is what irks me. Companies and schools that tell you you need a computer and it has to be a PC so get one! That is BS.

We should tell them, Well I don't like Windows so I'm getting a Mac. F you!!!

</rant>

Sorry. :mad:

EminenceGrise
Aug 22, 2004, 12:13 AM
You don't need the Novell Client just to access the internet. It's only needed if you want to connect to any shared servers that are set up on the network. Novell is just a file sharing protocol like SMB/Samba or AppleTalk. It has a network logon component, just like the Microsoft stuff (except that it actually works most of the time...), where you can go to any PC, login, and have access to all of your files no matter what PC you are at. It's not, however, something that's needed for the Internet at all, nor does it keep any of the standard networking protocols from working on the same network (e.g. just because there are some Novell servers running on the network, it's not going to actively keep your iBook from working).

If all you need to do is access the Internet, the only thing you should need is the appropriate IP information. If the network has DHCP set up, then you should just be able to plug in the iBook to an Ethernet jack and it will Just Work. Otherwise, you would need to manually enter an IP address, netmask, default gateway, and name server in the Network control panel, and then it should Just Work (it's not hard, and you'd have to do this whether you were using the Novell Client or not, FYI). The only exception I can see to this is if they have some kind of firewall that requires an active Novell logon before it lets the computer send traffic out over the Internet - however, I've never seen such a beast (well, I suppose it could possibly be set up that way with RADUIS, but that's an awful lot of work to go to for a school that is 'financially struggling'). In short you shouldn't need Novell at all unless they've specifically gone to a lot of trouble and done something to require it - otherwise it should be as simple as configuring the IP information, which they should be able to give you.

In short, you should be able to say "I'm getting an iBook, and I'd like to know if I can plug it in to an Ethernet port and get an IP address so I can use the Internet". The response should be a simple yes or no I would think. They may have policies about not letting people use their personal computers on the network, which I would expect them to just come out and say. If they say the Novell Client is required, ask them why (I'm certainly curious....).

As a side note, Novell is quite nice as network file sharing systems go. It's certainly much better than the Microsoft equivalent. My only gripe is that they farmed out the Mac client to ProSoft or whoever the outfit is, so now the Mac client costs money - whereas all the others are free.

TEG
Aug 22, 2004, 12:41 AM
I have not run in to anything as asinine as this, but Take a minute to read my suggestion.

1) Any computer with an ethernet port (RJ-45) can work on 98% of the networks in the world (The only exceptions are Coax and Token Ring Networks).
1a) To connect, you need an Ethernet Cable (Or Ethernet Patch Cable). Plug one end into the computer, and the other into the wall.
1b) Attempt to use the Internet, If it does not work after 10 minutes, you will need specific IP Addresses for your machine and the access points to the internet (This can ususally be obtained by a) conpying and using the information on another connected computer, then disconnecting that computer from the network, or b) an IT Administrator)
2) A single license of Novell Client for Mac is only $145. That is all that is required if you need to access anthing on a Novell System.
3) When changing File formats via Apple Works especially between Apple Works and M$ Software, you MUST provide the appropriate file extensions.
3a) If you already have the files converted, you can simply rename the files, and include the extension needed (Click, Return [Mac], Right-Click -> Rename... [Windows])

I know how frustrating it can be using a Mac in a system unaccustomed to supporting Macs.

Welcome and Please don't hesitate to ask other questions concerning this situation.

TEG
Computer Engineering Student
Former IT Administrator

brobson
Aug 23, 2004, 08:24 AM
I am sending my principal the link and if she approves it, the IT person will have no choice but to install it, right?
I have been looking at windows laptops with a heavy heart, I don't think I can bring myself to do it.
Brenda
I'll keep you posted. ;)

flyfish29
Aug 23, 2004, 08:38 AM
I am kinda confused, so u download lessons off the internet using AOL, and you cannot move them between computers?
Also the Apple Sales rep sounds pretty stupid, if your school network has ethernet jacks then you should be fine, the iBooks have an ethernet jack so you can surf, you don't need wireless to surf. Check out the general forum which has a guide to Windows and Mac networking, we need some more info about your situation.


I had the exact same problem with my saved aol lesson plans- using aol's software. The PC will not read those aol files any better than the Mac!

I think I solved the problem one of two ways: All I had to do was open each document and either cut and paste it into a word or appleworks document and save that or do the save-as command using aol's software and save it as text only- then try to open it using appleworks text-edit, or word and see if it open ok. either way should work, but try the second one out after doing a couple to be sure it is working right. It should be as simple as that.

Yeah, there is no way you could get a virus off aol home page unless you download attachemnents. Another solution is to quit aol (WHich I am glad I did long ago for the very problem stated above...they are not too compatible when it comes to files, etc.) and get another service provider at home and another email...try .Mac...I love it and no more expensive than aol when combined with my internet service provider's fees. Aol is so over priced now since almost everything they do is available on the net now. I used to be that they had major amounts of content that wasn't available on the net to other users, but not the case anymore.

Good luck,

brobson
Aug 23, 2004, 09:01 AM
Well the school won't pay for it.

I have to have Novell, I think, because once I checked my home e-mail from work by going to the AOL page and signing in and he got upset, apparantly that increases the chance of viruses.

Are you suggesting I could keep AOL by getting an ip address? Then I wouldn't be exposing their Novell to anything would I?

Also, back to trying to send the files with internet addresses to my WIndows at work:
In my files I'll have an internet page from favorites that I have saved.
For example: I saved this image:
(http://k-12.pisd.edu/schools/wells/ArtGallery/2001/2001page2.html) is the address but you probably don't need to know that.

Jungle frogs appears on my favorites scroll down on AOL.
then I move the highlighted name to a folder named Hatian Art on my harddrive for when we study that subject.
When I click on the file named Jungle frogs an "AOL logo with a heart on it symbol" the above site that I want opens.
How would I get Appleworks to convert it? I tried dropping it into the Appleworks folder but when I try to open it through finder, it isn't highlighted to even change it. I even tried photographing the image on the desktop (shift, control, 3) and then moving that image to appleworks, or attaching that image to send it to windows. Neither worked.
Sorry this is a novel. ANy suggestions would sure help.

Now I am not going to buy a windows because I am mad!
:mad: (that they won't purchase the software even though I am purchasing the computer!)

AoWolf
Aug 23, 2004, 09:12 AM
Not that its much help but my school like most is a windows school. I would just take my iBook in and when the teacher was not looking I would "barrow" one of the ether net ports and off I would go. I think you should be able to get on line but I wouldn't know...

brobson
Aug 23, 2004, 09:14 AM
Thank you,
I am testing that but the only problem is these are images I want to transfer and I have hundreds!
I could send myself an email with all the ip addresses and open each one in word and then save them but that would take an eternaty. I so wanted to just load my stuff on there easily.

I will consider leaving AOL
Sbglogal has dsl that looks appealing, I need to look at the cost.
Thanks
Brenda

brobson
Aug 23, 2004, 09:17 AM
Sorry not very clear:
"I could send myself an email" from my home mac to work windows.....



Brenda

flyfish29
Aug 23, 2004, 09:30 AM
In my files I'll have an internet page from favorites that I have saved.
For example: I saved this image:
(http://k-12.pisd.edu/schools/wells/ArtGallery/2001/2001page2.html) is the address but you probably don't need to know that.

Jungle frogs appears on my favorites scroll down on AOL.
then I move the highlighted name to a folder named Hatian Art on my harddrive for when we study that subject.
When I click on the file named Jungle frogs an "AOL logo with a heart on it symbol" the above site that I want opens.
How would I get Appleworks to convert it? I tried dropping it into the Appleworks folder but when I try to open it through finder, it isn't highlighted to even change it. I even tried photographing the image on the desktop (shift, control, 3) and then moving that image to appleworks, or attaching that image to send it to windows. Neither worked.
Sorry this is a novel. ANy suggestions would sure help.


So let me see if I have this right. You have a bunch of images/pictures you saved through the aol software- right? If you have the web address of all those images see below for a solution (3 actually- good, better, best ;))

edit: This might not be your problem after reading your post a third time- still unclear I think so I will leave this in just in case it is the problem or helps you solve it.

You have a favorites list of tons of lesson plan web pages in aol's software menu bar?

If it is indeed only web page addresses you have, I don't know if there is a way to export your favorites from the aol software but that would be the easiest way to convert those aol favorites to bookmarks to use in any web browser. You would not use appleworks, etc to open these favorites (which are simply bookmarks of favorite web pages).

I was under the understanding you had downloaded lesson plans and saved them using aol software. It sounds like you have only made these bookmarks to the pages.

The easiest solution is to simply stay with aol on the new computer and you will be able to export or send those favorites to your new computer and the aol software will be able to read them as if nothing has changed.

Here is another solution if you want to get rid of aol and what I did for my bookmarks. I know you can print out your favorites page list of web addresses as I have done so in the past with aol software. You could print it out and keep a copy of it. then, when you need a certain lesson plan you simply type in the web address off that page into a regular (non-aol browser) this way takes the least amount of time up front, but with long winded web addresses it can be cumbersome.

A third option is you could cut and past the web address from the aol software browser into another web browser(explorer, safari, mozilla) and save that page in the web browser as a bookmark- and just go to every favorite page and do this.

brobson
Aug 24, 2004, 09:11 PM
I spoke with the tech guy (after my principal had a few words with him) and he thinks this will work. He said my mac would have to be set to receive DHCP? I'll need to be set up to receive proxy form their server. They use a CAT-5 cable port (standard?) and will use a network interface card.
This is all greek to me. Will apple know what I need when I order?
He said buy the computer and bring it to him and he'll set it up. I won't be able to get into the network but who cares? If I do, I'll just plug the windows in and log in.
Does anyone see a reason this won't work since I have no idea what all that means?
I sure don't want to pay a 10% restocking fee.

My husband's boss wants a painting I did and we were talking about trading a used windows laptop for it but even free, or very nearly, I DON'T LIKE WINDOWS!!!!! Maybe if they made them more user friendly.
Brenda

Ps: anyone know how I could get a 15gb ipod for the cram and jam?
My area stores are out. Is there a serch tool for other apple stores?

YOU GUYS HAVE BEEN PRICELESS....THANKS! :D

jsw
Aug 24, 2004, 09:27 PM
I spoke with the tech guy (after my principal had a few words with him) and he thinks this will work.Excellent!He said my mac would have to be set to receive DHCP? I'll need to be set up to receive proxy form their server. They use a CAT-5 cable port (standard?) and will use a network interface card.
This is all greek to me. Will apple know what I need when I order?
It does DHCP by default ("DHCP" just means that the computer asks for its network address instead of specifying it - sort of like a substitute teacher getting a room assigned when he/she arrives as opposed to having a permanent room). No problem there. Easy to fix if problems arise as well. CAT-5 cable port is actually the Ethernet port, standard on all Macs and almost all PCs (CAT-5 is a quality designation for the cable used to connect the ports). The "network interface card" will already be inside your iBook - as it is on all Macs. You don't need to do anything at all special for this while ordering - it's all standard.
He said buy the computer and bring it to him and he'll set it up. I won't be able to get into the network but who cares? If I do, I'll just plug the windows in and log in.
Does anyone see a reason this won't work since I have no idea what all that means?
I sure don't want to pay a 10% restocking fee.
It'll work.
My husband's boss wants a painting I did and we were talking about trading a used windows laptop for it but even free, or very nearly, I DON'T LIKE WINDOWS!!!!! Maybe if they made them more user friendly.
BrendaDon't do it!!

Ps: anyone know how I could get a 15gb ipod for the cram and jam?
My area stores are out. Is there a serch tool for other apple stores?

YOU GUYS HAVE BEEN PRICELESS....THANKS! :DOrder via the Apple Store. They might have some. If not, the 20GB is only $70 or so given the edu discount and $200 off.

BornAgainMac
Aug 24, 2004, 10:49 PM
Plus your virus risk is greatly reduced by going with a Mac. Virus attachments in email can't run on the Mac. You can click on them and view them in Text Edit. Just don't forward them to anyone.

Crikey
Aug 25, 2004, 12:14 AM
At the high school I attended, Macs were not allowed on the school network. The TV station at the school owned three Macs used for Final Cut Pro editing and we needed to get online to download updates. We got around this by talking to the network guys to open the network once a month after school just so we could download updates, but we were not allowed to stay on the network. The reason was that the school's network was running Novell, and they didn't want to buy licenses for Novell for mac.

Omigod, you people are getting so much bad advice it's making my head hurt. If all you wanted to do with your Macs was use Software Update, and even surf, you wouldn't need to be clients on the Novell network at all -- you'd be trading packets with Apple.com and other Internet sites, not with the school's server.

Further, at least with the Macs and Novell server I run, you don't need any "Novell for Mac". Our server provides AppleTalk or AppleShare, can't recall what it was called, but I loaded Mac support on our server (it was included with the server OS, no extra charge) and voila the Macs can attach and use files. Granted, my Netware is embarrasingly old and so are the Macs.

Back to the original poster's problem, most likely an iBook would work fine on the school's network unless there are stupid policies in place. And let me get this straight: their net admin is afraid a Mac connecting to AOL will open their LAN to viruses? AARGGGHH!

That's it, I'm taking an aspirin and going to bed.


Crikey

Crikey
Aug 25, 2004, 12:35 AM
God, it amazes me that people use Novell. It's just a hassle. Even where I work, which has one of the most confoundedly bizarre and anti-user IT environments I've seen, I can still get to the network when I bring my Mac PB in on occasion.

As to the network "not accepting Macintosh stuff that's sent"... that's more likely ignorance talking than reality, although I guess it can be the case in Novell networks.

At the last place I worked, a new IT director came in and replaced one Novell Netware server on a 133Mhz Pentium PC with one Windows server on a 600MHz Pentium III -- which couldn't handle the load. So he added another Windows Pentium III -- and performance still sucked compared to before. So he added a third. Finally, performance was adequate when he added the fourth or fifth server, I can't remember which.

I was glad to get out of that place. Where I work now, 70 users run all their files and printers, and most of their applications, from one Novell server. And as I mentioned, we have Mac clients who are able to attach to Novell shares as easily as the PCs do. Plus, with Netware you can run Novell's GroupWise e-mail server, which is stone reliable and trouble-free compared to Microsoft Exchange Server running on Windows.

There are some really good reasons to choose Novell over Microsoft, although Microsoft probably gets a worse rap than it deserves because organizations don't want to pay real money to admins so they end up with self-taught desktop jockeys building servers (probably the case with my example above). Novell servers are at least as Mac-friendly as Windows servers, at least the old versions I've used -- Mac-hostile LAN environments are usually due to ignorance on the part of LAN admins who don't want to learn enough to support another platform.

I like having Macs on my LAN. When the inevitable zero-day exploit crashes every networked Windows box on the planet, at least a few of my people will still get work done. But I like Macs and they don't scare me; maybe I'm atypical in that respect.


Crikey