The
Current State of Technology at VUU
One of the campus’s historic achievements is the development
of the centralized information technology data network structure
over the past five years. In late January 2000, the Office
of Information Technology was established at Virginia Union
University in an effort to develop a centralized information
technology infrastructure for the institution. Prior to
this initiative, the primitive network was based on a decentralized
and ad-hoc structure with several local area networks not
fully addressing its needs in a fast-changing world of information
technology in higher education. Due to cost restrictions,
wireless was the connectivity choice over wired because
eight of the nine buildings on campus were not conducive
to wiring. Thus Virginia Union University became the 1st
institution in Virginia and the second in the nation to
become a totally wireless campus. This Historically Black
Institution or College (HBCU) achieved this feat for a mere
$800,000 where other contractors estimated the cost for
a wired campus at $3 million alone. Over the past five years,
the campus community has become increasingly reliant on
the high level of intra- and inter-network connections provided
by this wireless campus network.
In 2000, the IT Center was unquestionably, a modest, small,
beautiful facility in its early years. A new Help Desk was
developed to serve as a one-stop point-of-contact for all
information technology users at the University. Currently,
information technology users who need computer-related help
are encouraged to call the IT Center for assistance.
A
back room inside the new IT Center was converted to house
the new VUU-ITC network christened vuuNet on November 21,
2000. Prior to 2000, this small room contained old furniture
and yards of tangled cables and wires but was transformed
into a professionally designed Master Control Center with
raised floors, shelves, servers, computer monitors, hubs,
routers, e-mail, Web, and Internet access stations.
Servers
and the University's IBM mini computer are integrated centrally
into the network. The vuuNet network, like any computer
network, demands constant monitoring to ensure the hundreds
of parts, access points, radios, antennas, hubs, routers,
switches, servers and operating software installed in buildings
and strategic locations throughout the campus.
The
Office of Information Technology continues to upgrade the
campus information technology network to the address emerging
and expanding technological needs of students, faculty,
and staff. This early 2000 facility benefited the institution
in past years, but has since become dated, obsolete, and
not conducive to properly servicing the needs of the University.