Teaching Lab: Difference between revisions

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==Usage==
==Usage==
This term is mostly used by the computer science and electrical engineering community at Northwestern.  When needing a controlled computer environment with high computing power, students often use the Teaching Lab (and are often required by the professor to do so).
This term is mostly used by the computer science and electrical engineering community at Northwestern when talking about a controlled computer environment with high computing power. It is more often used colloquially as "<em>T-Lab</em>."


==Description==
==Description==

Revision as of 09:21, 3 June 2015

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Teaching Lab

Part of Speech

Noun

Pronunciation

  1. ['teech iŋ/lab]
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  2. ['tee/lab]
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Usage

This term is mostly used by the computer science and electrical engineering community at Northwestern when talking about a controlled computer environment with high computing power. It is more often used colloquially as "T-Lab."

Description

The Teaching Lab, known colloquially as "T-Lab," is the computer lab on the second floor of the Technological Institute (Tech) in room F252, right before the bridge that connects to the Ford. This particular lab consists of 16 high-end PCs connected to a storage server on a private network. The PCs include powerful graphics cards attached to large LCD displays, dual boot Linux and Windows XP, and are on a private network. They have a wide range of software installed and are used in numerous courses. The T-Lab can be used for studio instruction. As an adjunct to the T-Lab, WiFi and camera-enabled Pocket PC handheld computers are available for students to check out for project use with faculty approval. It's usually quite dark and uninteresting inside, so it's not known to be an ideal meeting place for group discussions. [1]

Example Sentences

"Let's meet up in T-Lab to work on the networking program assignment."

"Do you want to meet up in Wilks or T-Lab to talk about the project?" "I'd like to meet up in Wilks because it's much more relaxing."

References