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Sept. 30, 2008 issue
EagleMail soars Oct. 3


By Amy E. Whitesall

 

Eastern Michigan is about to launch a new e-mail system and, whether you've been ignoring the e-mails that detail the switch, reading every word you can get your hands on or avoiding the matter altogether, it's time to pay attention.

Even as you read this, it's already happening.

EagleMail training

YOU HAVE NEW MAIL: This screen capture shows
the design, colors and fonts that will be part of
EagleMail, the new campus e-mail system that
debuts Oct. 3.

To make the Oct. 3 transition seamless for users, the hosting company, Merit, is already synchronizing e-mails and address books in the old and new systems. When service switches to EagleMail Oct. 3, users will log in the same way they always have, but with dramatically different results.

That login will take them to a veritable playground of electronic communication: unlimited storage, a modern-looking and customizable screen environment, compatibility with cell phones, Blackberrys and iPhones; and calendar and collaboration tools. It'll happily work with programs like Outlook and Thunderbird, which download e-mail to your computer, or you can use all the features from any computer connected to the Internet.

And yes, it sends e-mail, too.

"It's very easy to use," said Rhonda DeLong, director of Web communications. "Yes, it's got lots of features that you might not know how to use right away but, as far as composing and sending e-mail, it's very straightforward. We will offer training, but I think a lot of people are going to look at it and think, 'Why would I need to be trained?'"

Approximately 200 people participated in a pilot launch over the summer, using the new system for a month and keeping a log of problems and comments.

"We were looking at it not only from the standpoint of 'does it work?', but "does it work for users?" DeLong said. "One of the things that stuck out for me was that everyone was really bummed that they had to go back to the other system for a couple of months. Everyone was like, 'Get this up and running.'"

EagleMail training

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW: Kathy Robertson, a
senior instructional technologist in informational
technology, moderates a Sept. 29 workshop in Halle
Library about how to use the new e-mail system that
will be coming online Oct 3. New e-mail system

workshops started earlier this month and will
continue in October.

The division of information technology has created user guides and quick-start guides, nonetheless, and the IT help desk will offer support for anyone who needs it.

Most users on campus won't need to do anything beyond making sure their e-mail passwords are up to date. Any password that's more than six months old won't work when the new system goes live.

People who use e-mail clients like Thunderbird, Eudora, Outlook or MacMail will need to change some security settings and, for those who have their EMU mail forwarded to another account, will have to set that up within EagleMail. People who use group e-mail lists will have to rebuild those lists in EagleMail, though all their e-mails and address books will be migrated to the new system.

Even though EagleMail is very intuitive, DeLong says IT is allowing for some extra time to get everyone transitioned smoothly before officially launching the calendar and sharing functions. That said, those features will work right from the start — they just won't be supported or migrated from the old system until early 2009.

By making a series of synchronizing "sweeps," Merit is able to move EMU users to the new system with no downtime. Users should be able to log in Oct. 3 and find their e-mail world improved, intact and waiting for them.

And, if you find yourself hanging on that "should," not so confident this thing will actually do what its handlers say, rest assured those working on the new system understand.

"There's a lot of skepticism on campus," DeLong said. "But, I feel like we can't lose. First of all, our old system is so bad, and the product we've chosen is very innovative and very much on the edge of what a lot of universities are trying to do. In the beginning, we may have a lot of skeptics, but I think the overall product and the service they get will win them over."

Faculty, staff, or students who need personal assistance with EagleMail can contact the IT Help Desk at 487-2120 or go to   https://it.emich.edu/helpdesk/. Online documentation about EagleMail is available at https://www.emich.edu/training/email.

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