| | |
Linux on college networks?
![]() |
My friend jesse is going to college and I'm helping him set up his linux box. He hasn't gotten online yet, but I was just wondering if colleges restrict linux internet access. I'm sure there's always a way around any restrcitions they have
but I was just wondering if anyone has bad experiences with linux and college internet.
but I was just wondering if anyone has bad experiences with linux and college internet. ---------------------------------------
Insomnia: Becoming conscious of your own craziness
Insomnia: Becoming conscious of your own craziness
•
•
•
•
Originally Posted by Eico
My friend jesse is going to college and I'm helping him set up his linux box. He hasn't gotten online yet, but I was just wondering if colleges restrict linux internet access. I'm sure there's always a way around any restrcitions they havebut I was just wondering if anyone has bad experiences with linux and college internet.
-- Michael RudasHow To Ask Questions The Smart Way (article by Eric Raymond).
Dealing with Malware
My Articles page.
My Best-of-Breed Free Software for Windows list
Other Windows- & Microsoft-related links
The Audio Tech's Page
My blog
The Oak Park Computer Club
PenguiCon 4.0 Open Source & Science Fiction convention, April 21-23, 2006.
Knoppix Linux (CD-bootable) download. information, & support.
If you're going for something that will integrate flawlessly with any microsoft 2000 or above server environment...go with MEPIS Linux. It is a live CD with option to install on hard disk...fantastic linux distribution. It integrated for me with no problems onto a 500 computer windows 2000 network....in fact, the difference couldn't even be told without an nmap of the machine.
My Home Away from Home: Yet Another Linux Blog
This wasn't in college, but in high school, anything on the network besides windows 98 or 2000 was not allowed. Windows XP was not even allowed! Most of this was due to licensing issues, but the school district felt that any linux or bsd was only going to be used for the purpose of "hacking." This never stopped anyone from bringing in their linux or bsd machine to school to connect to the wireless, or ethernet. The district never had any way of controlling it. They would have to run scans of every node on the network, and then if the tcp stack of one, is like that of a bsd/linux block that MAC address, which is really uneffective, cuz it isn't difficult to buy a new MAC, or alter the tcp-stack. I don't have any resources at hand, but there is lots of documentation and even some software for linux that can. (and I think bsd as well, though I think I have heard that this can be done at the kernel compile level) Colleges are much more liberal than high schools though. As far as ease of use though, set the person up with ifplugd, so that his ethernet link can automatically be detected at plug/drop to run a script. (IE: dhcpcd eth0/dhcpcd -k eth0) Definitely make sure he has samba.
PARANOIA:
A healthy understanding of the way the universe works.
A healthy understanding of the way the universe works.
If all you're talking about is TCP/IP connectivity, it shouldn't matter. The only time most sysadmins get antsy is if you start doing odd stuff on their network, like ARP poisoning and packet sniffing. If all you're doing is surfing the Web and the like, they'll probably never care what OS you're running.
They may have a policy about what OSes they allow on their network, but it's probably more of a technical support/ Help Desk issue. Don't expect to get much help from their IS/IT staff when running Linux. At the college I just finished from, the only thing the IT staff could do to "troubleshoot" our UNIX/Linux installs was to wipe it out and re-Ghost image it. Even then they had to come in and get one of the instructors to change the IP addresses on the "fixed" boxes!
They may have a policy about what OSes they allow on their network, but it's probably more of a technical support/ Help Desk issue. Don't expect to get much help from their IS/IT staff when running Linux. At the college I just finished from, the only thing the IT staff could do to "troubleshoot" our UNIX/Linux installs was to wipe it out and re-Ghost image it. Even then they had to come in and get one of the instructors to change the IP addresses on the "fixed" boxes!
Alex Cavnar, aka alc6379
•
•
•
•
Originally Posted by alc6379
If all you're talking about is TCP/IP connectivity, it shouldn't matter. The only time most sysadmins get antsy is if you start doing odd stuff on their network, like ARP poisoning and packet sniffing. If all you're doing is surfing the Web and the like, they'll probably never care what OS you're running.
My Home Away from Home: Yet Another Linux Blog
•
•
Join Date: Mar 2004
Posts: 1,620
Reputation:
Solved Threads: 51
Hello,
Technically, there should be no problem running Linux at your college. TCP/IP is TCP/IP. An educated techie with some time on their hands might be able to detect you are running something else, but unless you are causing a problem, you should be alright.
Politically, anything could happen to you.
Helpdesk wise, I agree. If you are out of box, they might give you a flyer, or offer to let you use a public computer to look at the web and try figuring it out on your own. They might even ask you to come back and teach them on how you got things working.
Now, what should you avoid doing? In other words, things that will place you on a radar screen....
DON'T:
1) Setup a DHCP server on the network. This will mess a lot of other things up, and they will find you.
2) Setup a server and start sharing music / files / tests. A simple scan can show what you are serving. You are a user / guest on their network. They can unplug you. You might have to sign a user agreement. Read it.
3) Run your NIC in promisicous mode (sniffing). Software exists to detect them.
4) Share a printer. Pranksters might run you out of ink and paper. I have seen this happen.
I would have a firewall on it, and would not allow the computer to share easily.
Good luck,
Christian
Technically, there should be no problem running Linux at your college. TCP/IP is TCP/IP. An educated techie with some time on their hands might be able to detect you are running something else, but unless you are causing a problem, you should be alright.
Politically, anything could happen to you.
Helpdesk wise, I agree. If you are out of box, they might give you a flyer, or offer to let you use a public computer to look at the web and try figuring it out on your own. They might even ask you to come back and teach them on how you got things working.
Now, what should you avoid doing? In other words, things that will place you on a radar screen....
DON'T:
1) Setup a DHCP server on the network. This will mess a lot of other things up, and they will find you.
2) Setup a server and start sharing music / files / tests. A simple scan can show what you are serving. You are a user / guest on their network. They can unplug you. You might have to sign a user agreement. Read it.
3) Run your NIC in promisicous mode (sniffing). Software exists to detect them.
4) Share a printer. Pranksters might run you out of ink and paper. I have seen this happen.
I would have a firewall on it, and would not allow the computer to share easily.
Good luck,
Christian
![]() |
Similar Threads
- What Certifications do You Have? (IT Professionals' Lounge)
Other Threads in the Getting Started and Choosing a Distro Forum
- Previous Thread: anyone know when fedora core 2 is out
- Next Thread: Linux for cheap
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
age-related baremetal chrome cio cloudcomputing code commercial computers crystalballsunday developers development distributions distro dsl elderly embedded google http://expertcore.org/ innovations jauntyjackalope kernel library linus linux microsoft multi-core netgear newbies openoffice.org operating operatingsystems parallel performance processing redhat routers smp studios system systembuilders systemintegrators terminalservices thecloud thinclients tools ubuntu users virtualization vmware webbased wikis windows xenon






