DeVry Switches to HP for Intensive Student Computing

To accommodate the intensive computing needs of its technology and engineering students and faculty, DeVry University has completed most of a three-year computer refresh to move off of Gateway machines and onto HP Z Workstations and HP EliteBook Mobile Workstations. DeVry has about 80,000 students and 94 locations in North America.

According to Timothy Harrington, national assistant dean of DeVry's College of Engineering and Information Science, the upgrade process began in 2007. "Our first priority was student lab environments; but now we are close to having HP universally on both academic and administrative networks," he said.

The workstations are needed, he explained, to run industry-standard applications for DeVry's academic programs. "We support applications from National Instruments' NI Multisim and NI LabVIEW with connections to multiple devices to game program applications, such as [Epic Games'] Unreal [Development Kit] and Autodesk 3ds Max to the full spectrum of Adobe products for our Web design curriculum."

Also, as a faculty member, Harrington noted, he might have 40 files open at a time, including several applications. "If I want to look at a student's assignment for a few minutes, I don't want to shut everything down just to bring up that one application. The HP workstation functions extremely well under this type of heavy demand."

As part of its Game and Simulation Programming curriculum, the institution was exploring the use of Alienware computers in its game studios. However, Harrington said, DeVry found the performance of HP game-class computers to be "better and more reliable."

The HP machines currently run Microsoft's Windows XP Professional, but Harrington said the university is planning a migration to Windows 7 in July 2011.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • large group of college students sitting on an academic quad

    Student Readiness: Learning to Learn

    Melissa Loble, Instructure's chief academic officer, recommends a focus on 'readiness' as a broader concept as we try to understand how to build meaningful education experiences that can form a bridge from the university to the workplace. Here, we ask Loble what readiness is and how to offer students the ability to 'learn to learn'.

  • Graphic of connected devices protected by digital padlocks

    Veeam Launches Agent Commander to Help Detect Enterprise AI Risk

    Veeam Software has introduced Agent Commander, a new platform designed to help enterprises detect AI risk, protect AI systems, and undo AI mistakes.

  • abstract coding

    Anthropic's New AI Model Targets Coding, Enterprise Work

    Anthropic has released Claude Opus 4.6, introducing a million-token context window and automated agent coordination features as the AI company seeks to expand beyond software development into broader enterprise applications.

  • globe surrounded by network connections

    AI Adoption Is Surging, but Infrastructure and Language Gaps Persist

    Artificial intelligence may be spreading faster than previous waves of consumer tech, but a report from Microsoft's AI Economy Institute suggests its benefits are concentrating in a relatively small set of countries, with infrastructure and language emerging as major dividing lines.