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New E-Mail System--Meeting the Needs of Students and Faculty

4/1/2004

The halls of academia depend on fast-flowing, unencumbered, virus-free e-mail. You practically can’t get through school without it. In fact, at least one survey shows that 93 percent of American college students regularly use the Internet, making them the most connected segment of the population. And e-mail use is at least as popular as Web-surfing.

At California State University at Northridge (CSUN), a 353-acre campus in suburban Los Angeles, e-mail is an important facet of college life. CSUN serves 28,000 students and a faculty and staff of more than 3,300. Like so many other institutions, CSUN built its e-mail infrastructure a number of years ago.

The hardware and software of the old system were so antiquated that the system administrator had to reboot the system once or twice a day just to keep the application running, and mail delivery often took an hour or more. The poor service led some departments to deploy their own e-mail systems on campus.

The university realized it needed a new e-mail system, the requirements for which were clear: an integrated solution that could provide Web-based e-mail, calendaring, anti-virus software, content-filtering—all in one easy-to-use package.

In the fall of 2002, the school’s IT department decided to rebuild its enterprise mail system with the help of Mirapoint. As a result, today’s e-mail volume at CSUN—a peak capacity of two million messages a day—is a long way from much-slower SGI days.

Advance notice to students and university personnel came through the campus newspaper, e-mail announcements, and the university’s Tidbits announcement service, published by the University Support Services Group.

Under the new system, CSUN can flexibly configure Mirapoint's technology to fit their specific needs. When the anti-virus application is enabled, CSUN officials can expect delivery capacity to be approximately 500,000 messages per day. If anti-virus service is not needed, the system has the potential to support more than two million messages per day.

Using the new system’s class-of-service controls, administrators can easily define which services are to be provided to which particular users and domains. For example, class-of-service allow administrators to configure certain service packages for faculty and other packages for students.

CSUN’s new system is designed around services. Students, faculty, and staff can now take advantage of POP and IMAP e-mail. The system supports desktop clients such as Microsoft Outlook, offers Webmail and access from wireless PDAs, and has advanced collaborative features. The system is LDAPv3-compliant and iCal- and vCal-ready. These were important considerations in a university with some 5,000 desktop computers and an unknown—and proliferating—number of laptops, PDAs, integrated telephones, and tablet computers.

Downtime is no longer a problem at CSUN. The system has been up and running 99.99 percent of the time. Over the last year, the only time it was down was for the installation of anti-virus software.



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