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Announcements
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New Nano Research Facility Staff
As the Nano Research Facility Principal Scientist and Lab Manager, Yujie Xiong is responsible for the development of technical core competency and the sustainability of operation. His first day was March 1.
Kristy Wendt also recently joined the School of Engineering staff as a Research Engineer in the Nano Research Facility. As a Research Engineer, her primary goal is to train TEM and SEM users to be self-sufficient in their endeavors, while also providing expertise and technical support.
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New Administrative Assistant in Energy, Environmental & Chemical Engineering
Lynn Zaltsman is a new administrative assistant in the Department of Energy, Environmental & Chemical Engineering. She will work with Professor Richard Axelbaum for the Consortium for Clean Coal Utilization.
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WUSTL KEY
Over the past few months, you have been receiving communications regarding the voluntary selection of a WUSTL KEY log-on ID and password for University applications displaying the WUSTLKey logo. Beginning in late March the WUSTLKey will be required for access to all applications supported by WUSTLConnect. As of February 10, only 50% of students, staff and faculty at the School of Engineering have obtained their WUSTLKey.
If you have not done so, it is important that you select your WUSTL KEY and begin using it now to minimize access difficulties during the coming busy times.
You can do this quickly and easily using the on-line self-service tools.
Create your WUSTL KEY now!
Read More
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Message from Engineering IT: Recent Network Outages
As noted in previous messages, the recent network outage is due to an Engineering School router issue. We continue to work with the vendor on an hourly basis to resolve the crashing issues. We believe there are two problems that we are working through at the moment.
- There is a hardware problem with one of the supervisor modules in the router.
- There is a software bug router in the router that is exacerbated by the recent uptick in P2P network traffic (Edonkey, BitTorrent, etc.) which produces very high loads on the router causing it to crash.
Until we resolve the problem, please refrain from using P2P programs or at least limit the number of incoming connections to one or two from outside the Engineering School. Thank you for your patience as we work to resolve this problem.
Thank you,
Engineering IT
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I-64 Construction Updates
Don't get caught in traffic. Washington University created a Web site with current I-64 construction information.
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