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Prior to 1983-84, Maui Community College's Computing Center provided support
for instructional activities. Administrative computing consisted of a Courier
CRT terminal and printer connected to the University of Hawaii IBM mainframe
located on Oahu. Hence hardware and software acquisitions were aimed at
improving the data communications with the University of Hawaii Computing
Center at Manoa, as well as expanding instructional support capabilities
at Maui Community College. The facility, which housed two CRT terminals
and two Apple II microcomputers, was a small room on the third floor of
the library; in 1983 it moved to the first floor.
Centralized Computing Systems
Emerging administrative needs and the granting of federal funds through
Title III changed the Maui Community College Computing Center's services.
Now, both administrative and instructional activities share communications
hardware, software and personnel, thereby minimizing expense and bureaucratic
complications. In October 1983 the Computing Center acquired a DEC VAX
11/750 computing system with federal funds through Title III. This minicomputer
was originally used for both administrative and instructional purposes
until an instructional centralized computing system was acquired. The VAX
11/750 was replaced by a VAX 4000/200 given to the campus in June 1991
by the Office of the Chancellor for the Community Colleges. It is now used
solely for administrative systems.
A Gandalf Private Automatic Computer Exchange was installed in
October in 1985 to allow for port sharing of existing equipment, as well
as selection between Maui Community College computers and others in the
university system. In April 1986 the VAX 11/750 was the first community
college system to be connected to the Management Systems Office VAX network.
In October 1986, three years after the VAX 11/750's arrival, a
DEC MicroVAX II was acquired with institutional support funds. However,
the VAX 11/750's throughput was found to be better for administrative applications;
hence the MicroVAX II was used for instruction and academic support. A
second MicroVAX II was acquired in June 1988 for use in the Nursing/Learning
Resource facility. It was used for administrative word processing until
the new building was completed and acquisition of other VAX systems permitted
it to return to its intended use in instructional computing. In the middle
of 1992 it became the student machine, being replaced in 1995 by a DEC
Alpha 2100. The State of Hawaii contracted the Maui Community College Computing
Center in 1990 to develop tools that could be used by information providers
on the Hawaii State Information Gateway. A MicroVAX 3100 was acquired for
the project. In May 1992 a VAX 4000/300 was acquired by pooling instruction
and institutional support equipment replacement funds to accommodate the
increased demand for centralized computng by faculty, staff and administrators.
It replaced the MicroVAX II acquired in 1986. During the 1992-93 academic
year, MCC Computing Services developed the User Menu System to tie the
VAX 4300, VAX 4200 and the MicroVAX 3100 together as a virtual machine
from the users' standpoint. Users access the VAX 4300 and are shunted to
the other systems depending on which application they select. This user
interface also enables immediate access from the user's personal account
to information resources throughout the State of Hawaii and our nation.
Library Automation
In June 1986 a C. Itoh Enterprises minicomputer was installed. The library
holdings were placed on the CIE 680, enabling students, faculty and staff
to search the electronic catalog from any location on campus or even from
home. In 1991, all community colleges decided to utilize Hamilton Library's
CARL system for circulation and a comprehensive university-wide catalog
of holdings. Maui Community College became a part of this system in Spring
1993.
Microcomputer Classrooms and Labs
The first of three microcomputer classrooms was created during the summer
of 1987 by pooling systems from Secretarial Science, Math/Science, Language
Arts and the Office of Community Service. A second such classroom was created
in January of 1988; it was outfitted with a network of 25 microcomputers
with 286 processors. The microcomputers in the Computing Center Lab were
networked at the same time. A year later, the second fully equipped microcomputer
lab became available to students when the new Learning Center opened its
doors.
In the summer of 1990 outreach areas in Wailea, Molokai and Lanai
were outfitted with small microcomputer labs, and 18 AT microcomputers
were acquired to make the Business Lab fully functional. During this same
summer, a third microcomputer classroom was created in the Student Center
Building in room 132; 25 386SX systems were networked using Novell's NetWare.
These latter systems were upgraded to 486/66 systems in Fall 1994.
During Spring 1992 a network of 12 Macintosh Plus systems were
added to the Microcomputer Room at the Computing Center, and a network
of 10 color Macintosh II si systems were added to The Learning Center.
The Macintosh networks were gifts of the University of Hawaii Computing
Center. The following summer all systems in the Computing Center Microcomputer
Room were upgraded to color 386SX systems, and a Hana outreach microcomputer
lab was outfitted with six 286 microcomputer systems.
Further upgrades took place the following year when twelve 386
systems with color SVGA capabilities were acquired for the Molokai Learning
Center, and 24 such systems replaced the Kahului campus TLC's 286 EGA systems.
Because many AT clones were replaced by these new systems, they in turn
could be used to eliminate the remaining dual-floppy systems in faculty
offices and at the Lanai Learning Center. Twenty-five of the 386 systems
were also acquired for upgrading one of the Kahului campus microcomputer
classrooms which still had dual-floppy PCs.
Buildings Ka Lama and Kupa`a, a State of Hawaii Capital Improvement
Project, were completed in 1995. Ka Lama has four 486/75 multimedia microcomputer
classrooms, one Pentium 75 multimedia classroom, a business lab and a secretarial
office simulation lab, each with a variety of systems including 486/75
and Pentium 75 multimedia systems, Power Macintosh systems and CRT terminals.
This facility replaced the business lab and two microcomputer classrooms
housed in the vacated business instruction facility. Equipment for the
four microcomputer classrooms in Kupa`a arrived in December of 1995
(2 rooms of 486/75 multimedia systems and a room of 25 Pentium 75 microcomputers,
all running Windows 95). Early in 1996 Pentium 100s, with system drives
partitioned 3 ways (NeXTSTEP Developer environment, Linux and Windows 95)
were installed in the fourth microcomputer classroom in Kupa`a.
In January 1999 Laulima, a State of Hawaii Capital Improvement Project
which houses MCC's Continuing Education & Training and University Center
programs, was completed. Two 25-station microcomputer classrooms and one
15-station lab are populated with Pentium II 450Mhz systems, networked
via 100Base-T.
In December 1988 the Computing Services hired a half-time programmer, the
first position hired expressly for computing. Prior to this a member of
the instructional faculty was given released time to develop and implement
administrative and campuswide computing systems. Two years later a halftime
clerk-steno and fulltime Computer Specialist IV were hired to meet growing
computing demands. In January of 1994 a half-time, temporary Computer Specialist
I was hired to support the UH College of Business Administration's MBA
program and continued for its three-year duration. Faced with campus network
expansion and the construction of two new buildings which house 11 microcomputer
classrooms and/or computing labs a Computer Specialist I, emergency hire
was added to the staff in 1995. That position was changed to a temporary
position Electronics Technician I in 1998. Continuing Education & Training
added a half-time Computer Specialist I in the same year.
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