Accounts Overview
Table of Contents
Business accounts
Two different processes are used to create accounts for people associated
with the college: students accounts are generated automatically,
faculty and staff accounts are created by hand.
Student accounts
Every student who signs up to take a College of Business class or enrolls
in the college is automatically given a College of Business account, complete
with a Username/password combination. For example, when a student signs up to
take BA131, this enrollment information is forwarded to the college's computer
systems, and an account is created for the student. This means
the student will have an Exchange email box and several file storage areas on
the first day of the term.
By default, the College of Business creates a seven- or eight-character
Username for each student. The method used to create Usernames makes sure each student gets a unique
Username that disguises the student's personal
information. If you do not know your Username, the best method to find out is to
ask a Lab Assistant or send an inquiry to the
Help Desk. Just for the
record, the college will normally create a Username according to the following
formula:
- First three letters of the student's last name
- First letter of the student's first name
- First letter of the student's middle name (if any)
- Two digits from the date the student was born. For example, if a student
was born on September 4, 1985, then the digits would be 04.
- One digit which comes from hashing the last three digits of the
student's 9-digit university number. For example, if the last three digits of a student's
university number are 587, then 5 + 8 + 7 is 20, and so the hashed digit
would be the final 0 in the number 20.
If for some reason you feel your Username is inappropriate, you can ask the
college to change it.
Faculty and staff accounts
Accounts for faculty and staff are created by a system administrator by
hand. The typical Username is composed of the person's last name followed by an
initial. Thus, Roger Graham's Username is GrahamR.
Logging onto the College of Business network
When you turn on a computer in Bexell Hall, you are asked to fill out three
fields in the opening dialog box which lets you log onto the College of Business
network: Username, Password, and "Log on to" fields.
- Username field: Enter your Username, such as Stu123 or Grahamr, as
discussed above.
- Password field: The initial password for students is their 9-digit
university number. Since faculty and staff accounts are created by hand, they
receive their initial password directly from the system administrator who
creates the account. Either way, you should change your password to a more
secure combination of letters and numbers as described in the
Changing your password section below.
- "Log on to" field: Enter BUS so your Username/password
combination is validated by the College of Business network.
Once you have logged onto the college's network for a Windows computing
session, you can open your Exchange email box or use the college's file servers
without needing to re-enter your Username/password combination. However, if you
want to open your ONID mailbox or store files on an ONID file server, then you
will need to enter your ONID Username/password combination to complete those
actions.
What to do if you cannot log in with your Username/password combination
If you cannot log on to the college network:
- Begin by making sure you entered your Username/password combination
correctly. Also check to make sure you set the "Log on to" field to BUS.
- Students should check with a Lab Assistant in the basement computer lab
to make sure they are using the
correct Username.
- If all else fails, go to Bexell 205 with a photo ID, and the Help Desk staff will
reset your password to a new value. Note: system administrators
have no way to find out the password for a Username, so they must create a
brand new password to replace the unknown existing password.
Changing your Password
Choosing a good password protects your account from crackers and other forms
of malicious harm. You should choose a good password and safeguard it from
discovery. Your initial password is not a good long-term choice, so you should
change your password the first time you log on to the college's network.
We recommend reading this
Choosing a Good
Password page written by the folks in the University of Chicago network
services area.
How to change your password
- Press Ctrl + Alt + Delete
- Click "Change Password..."
- Enter your old password and your new password (two times)
- press "Ok"
This one-step procedure will reset your password on all the college's file
servers and on the college's Exchange email server.
College of Business versus ONID (OSU Network ID) accounts
Many parts of the world (such as the United States Electoral College) are
based on a historical legacy, and if people could create a brand new system from
scratch, life would be simpler. This statement is definitely true for how
computing services have evolved on campus.
Oregon State University has a long tradition of strong colleges with a
decentralized organizational structure. So as personal computing made its way
onto campus, many colleges set up computer labs, local area networks, email
systems, and file servers. After these college-level systems were established,
Central Computing Services established ONID accounts for all students, faculty,
and staff. This link will take you to the university's
ONID Home Page which explains more about
your ONID file storage, email, and other services.
Today, many colleges on campus offer students, faculty and staff with
accounts, mailboxes and file storage areas. This duplication means you must
choose which services to use, and you must take steps to avoid dead-letter boxes
and other unwanted repercussions from these overlapping services. It also means
you have at least two (and possibly five or six) different Username/password
combinations to remember, and each combination lets you use a different
set of college or university services. System administrators are working behind
the scenes to merge these systems, but lots of hard work must be done to make
this happen.
Perhaps the most important choice for you to make is which email account to
use as your primary email account. You can learn more about how to make this
choice on our Email page.
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