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 11 
 on: April 06, 2008, 09:06:15 PM 
Started by Nikki - Last post by ERO
Hi Nikki
We have a Postgraduate association that may be able to help you get into contact with others doing thesis' at Monash... the Gippsland postraduate President is Mahfuzul and can be contacted at: president.gaps@general.monash.edu.au
The monash postgraduate association is also quite active and would be worth a checkout! http://mpa.monash.edu.au/ or contact the president: tldor1@student.monash.edu.au

The MPA website is a great source of info in regards to thesis that you might find useful also Nikki! Feel free to give me a call if you have more questions. As Julie said, best of luck with your Thesis - I'm still doing my Undergrad but would have loved to chat to you more about it if I was doing my thesis also!!!

Sarah Elston
ERO
MUGSU Inc
(03)51227198

 12 
 on: April 05, 2008, 12:40:56 AM 
Started by Nikki - Last post by Nikki
Thanks Julie,
It can be a lonely process but those feelings are only on and off.
I am greatly enjoying my study and am usually so excited and involved that I don't pay attention to the isolation. 
Good luck with your work,
Nikki
 Smiley

 13 
 on: April 05, 2008, 12:27:40 AM 
Started by Nikki - Last post by jasco2
Hi Nikki

I hope you aren't all on your own, it sounds very isolating.  I thought I would respond to your post because you sounded so lonely, but I am not doing a thesis unfortunately.  I hope someone who is responds to you soon.

Julie

 14 
 on: April 05, 2008, 12:25:41 AM 
Started by Da Prez - Last post by jasco2
I have found many negatives and many positives about off campus learning.  The positives for me relate to the ability to study in a time that is convenient for me.  Living in a remote rural location it would be virtually impossible to attend uni in the traditional manner, so off campus learning is my only option. 

The negatives have mostly been about isolation from other students and lecturers and tutors.  It is very hard to study in isolation from others, with only access to the Monash Portal and Blackboard as your virtual lecture theatre.  I have found some lecturers are very good with the technology (eg talking into their microphones) and others aren't, which makes it very difficult to listen to lectures when the audio is bad.  I agree, it would be great if we could have video content of the lectures too.  I have learnt early on that it is important to regularly check the Portal and Blackboard, you can find out a lot of things from other student posts without having to put your own up.  I have also learnt to read the material carefully and answer the question precisely.  Again, because we can't just quickly check with another student on something, you can find you work a long time in isolation going down the wrong path before you discover your error.  Big time wasters. 

Another thing has been the library and getting books.  We are disadvantaged because we have the books for the same amount of time as an on campus student, but it takes maybe a week or more to get them, and we don't have the luxury of going through the book before we get it to see if it suits our purposes.  So when it finally turns up, and it's not exactly what we wanted, we have to post it back, and cover the expense.  I'll be happy when you can download chapters of books online rather than have to wait for books to arrive.  I know this techology is available, perhaps we'll get it here soon. 

Anyway, it's not all negative or all positive, but I tend to think there is more positive than negative.  I guess if I didn't I wouldn't still be here.

 Smiley

 15 
 on: March 22, 2008, 02:26:58 AM 
Started by Da Prez - Last post by ranga
I have found this Off Campus Student program really confusing and very badly prepared.
I was expecting to download video content of the lectures. It’s not that complicated. All you need is a camcorder and a macbook with finalcut/
Mp4 compresses the video files and the size will be bearable to download.

Instead I have these badly made mp3 files...

At least if they could have the pdf slides on the same web page as the audio files or maybe organized into folders with some sort of order.
It’s all a mess!

I'm lost.
is there anyone who has figured out how to get a grip /// im slipping away...

 16 
 on: March 19, 2008, 06:50:15 AM 
Started by Nikki - Last post by Nikki
Hi everyone,
Is there anyone out there writing a thesis off campus?
This is my final semester and I athough my supervisor is great,
this is by far the loneliest of semesters for me. I found that in all my course units
the MUSO discussions etc kept me sane but now...
I find myself discussing all the ideas swimming around in my head with myself,
not at all productive.
I would love to hear from others coping from afar with the thesis, or maybe I really am alone?
Cheers,
Nikki

 17 
 on: February 24, 2008, 08:39:09 PM 
Started by ERO - Last post by ERO
Welcome all Buddy Program participants!!!
How are you all going so far? Make sure you check out the e O-week stuff that your Off Campus vice president has organised at www.eoweek.com - there is a major comp with clues every day...
Have you received all of your unit materials so far?
Have you been in contact with your lecturer to touch base?
Have you been able to access either new or second hand copies of the required texts?

Let us know your thoughts on being an off campus student!!

 18 
 on: February 11, 2008, 10:57:56 PM 
Started by Environ - Last post by Environ
For those looking for a cheap and reliable latop the Asus Eee PC is now avaliable at Officeworks and Harvey Norman in Gippsland
I was able to pick one up for $480.00, it's great for meetings and takeing to classes, kinda like the Wii of computers.

for $480.00 you get a  0.92kg laptop the size of a book (and smaller then the average textbook)
7" Widescreen Monitor
b/g Wireless Networking
Intel 900mhz CPU
4G Solid State Hard Drive
500mb DDR2 Ram
3x USB2 Ports
SD/MMC Multi Card Reader
Webcam + Mic
2-3hr Battery Life
Linux operating system with easy to use menus, full MSOffice Compatable Office Suit, Games and Educational Tooks (Can be replaced with WinXP)

*Warning****
Unfortunatly at this time Gippsland uses a Cisco VPN which at this point doesn't work with the Eee PC
However it's likely that this will be changeing in the next few months.

 19 
 on: February 11, 2008, 10:35:10 PM 
Started by Melanie - Last post by Environ
Unfortunatly, the power saving benefits are negligible or non-existent with modern monitors, with only CRT (The Big Old Computer Monitors) showing any difference at all, in fact for LCD panels the energy use acturally goes up.
Instead lower the refresh rate of your monitor

from techlogg.com
The refresh rate is the speed at which the monitor updates the image on the screen so many times per second. On CRT monitors, this is quite critical because drop the refresh rate too low and you start noticing that annoying flicker.

We found in testing that by using Blackle, power consumption dropped on our 17-inch Mitsubishi DV1770 test monitor from 72.5W to 65.4W. By way of comparison, we retested the same monitor on Google but dropped the refresh rate of the 1024x768-pixel display from 85Hz to 75Hz and found the power consumption dropped accordingly from 72.5W down to 67.9W.

We then tested our 15-inch LG StudioWorks 570LE LCD monitor but instead of a power rise when going from Google to Blackle, we found that we were able to gain a small reduction in power consumption by dropping the refresh rate from 85Hz to 60Hz. In this test, power consumption dropped from 26.4W to 26.2W, certainly not much of a drop, but at least it wasn’t a rise as we found when using Blackle instead of Google.

While refresh rate is critical to comfortable use of CRT monitors, it’s far less critical for everyday use of LCD monitors so if you want to reduce the already low power consumption of your PC LCD monitor, ensure that the refresh rate is as low as possible. Most LCD monitors typically allow 60 or 75Hz, settings allowed for by our other test monitor, an LG L192WS 19-inch widescreen model.

While using Blackle saw a rise in this LCD monitor’s power consumption as well, dropping the refresh rate from 75 to 60Hz saw power consumption on Google fall from 24.9W to 24.5W.

 20 
 on: February 11, 2008, 10:21:13 PM 
Started by Ardan - Last post by Environ
Hi Sorry for the slow reply.. the website has it in for me  Cry

Yes ENVAS is alive and kicking, the first meeting is sceduled for the 1st week of Uni
There is also a monthly ebullitan with information on whats going on with ENVAS and MUGSU in regards to the environment.
send me an email if you want a copy, i'll post it up here as well.

Fiona.

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