Tech Tips for Online Classes
Minimum Specs: Hardware, Software,
& Access
Equipment
Every effort has been made to make Oakton Online courses as technologically
accessible to the widest variety of students as possible. While many
classes will require higher levels of hardware and software, the absolute
minimum for any configuration is listed below. Very important comments
and tips follow.
Before enrolling in an online course please check your equipment
against these minimum standards then check the individual minimum
specs for your course
to see if you meet those additional needs.
IBM compatible
- Windows 98 or later operating system
- Pentium or equivalent processor
- At least 64 MB RAM
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Macintosh
- 8.6 or later operating system
- Power PC Processor
- At least 16MB RAM
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- Software
- Web browser software (see below).
The AOL default browser does not work well with our courses.
AOL users will have to use Netscape or IE. See the Tips
for AOL Users.
- A word processing program
- An email program (Web-based access to Oakton email is available
to students and employees at http://www.oakton.edu/webmail.
- Modem or other internet connection device
- Access to the Internet through an Internet Service Provider.
- Students must have their own ISP-- they cannot dial into
Oakton. See the page on ISPs
for more information.
Notes on the minimum specs:
Meeting the minimum specs above may allow you to connect to your
online course but the resulting quality of your connection could
be annoying.
A 14.4 modem, for instance, can seem painfully slow when downloading
graphics. The standard phone modem speed currently is 56 kbps.
Phone line quality can adversly impact modem speeds
Also, it should be noted that the specs themselves may be at odds.
You may not be able to upgrade one part of your configuration without
upgrading other parts. 32MB of RAM likely will not support the needs
of a good, recent vintage browser like Netscape 7.0+. A sophisticated
word processing program like MS Word is also going to be a system
memory hog. Running it at the same time as your browser likely will
require a lot more than the minimum RAM.
Browsers.
More recent browsers are going to need to run on more recent operating
systems.
WebCT/Blackboard Campus Edition 4.1, the course management program Oakton uses has these browser
requirements:
- Browser must handle frames, tables and javascript. (The browsers
that support these features are: Netscape 2.0 or greater and Internet
Explorer 4.0.)
- WebCT CE version 4.1 is very specific about the browser it supports. See the WebCT
Browser Tuneup page for more details.
- Certain tools require Java: the chat facility the
whiteboard tool. (This means that you will not be able to use
chat or the whiteboard without a java capable browser but the
rest of WebCT's features should work if you meet the standards
in item 1.
- Certain features on your browser need to be enabled: Java and
Javascript. See the Help guide for your browser for instructions.
- Browser Plugins (e.g., Shockwave, Acrobat Reader, etc.) may
be required. See the Plugins
page for more information
- Do not use the standard AOL browser. See AOL
Tips
- WebTV and similar "Internet Appliance" products are not supported
Check the Sample Pages
If the course you're interested in offers a sample lesson, definitely
try it out with the equipment you'll normally be using. This may give
you a better idea of compatibility. Be sure to follow any links on
those samples since many courses will link you to non-Oakton web sites
with system spec demands of their own. These unfortunately are out
of our control.
Unsure of what you've got?
You can get a report on your operating system & browser versions
(plus what plugins you're running) by going to our Browser/OS
Detection Page or WebCT's Browser
Tuneup Page.
As for checking your hardware minimum specs (RAM & processor
type), the simplest way on a PC is to watch your screen for it to
be displayed while you're booting up.
After boot up, most Windows 98 PCs and later have some easy way of doing
it. Some have a diagnostics feature or "sytem info" icon that you'll
find in the Control Panel group. Others have an option under Programs/Accessories/System
Tools/System Information. On many computers you can go to Start/Run
and type msinfo32 which
will open a window showing system specs.
For Mac users,
to verify which system software version that you have installed
- With no applications running on your computer, go to the Apple
menu and select "About this Macintosh"
- In the About window, look for the System version number. It
should be something like 7.5.3, 7.6, 8.0, etc."
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