Tech Tips
- After you retire, the Office of Information Technology will continue to provide you with support to ensure you can use your IdentiKey, CU Boulder email account, and have access to retiree-granted CU services like MyCUInfo and Outlook Online.
- OIT has a new website with a one-stop request portal for IT services, an IT service health dashboard, a tutorial list that can be easily filtered and improved search capability.
- Take action to help improve the accessibility of our digital campus environment for people with disabilities. Learn more from the Digital Accessibility Office at CU Boulder.
- The CRDDS offers a full range of services and educational opportunities including workshops, talks and consult hours that are free and open to all students, faculty and staff.
- It’s a new year with new promise and hope. Reach your goals for 2021 with the help of learning objectives supplemented by LinkedIn Learning.
- Turn on live captions during your Zoom sessions to improve the accessibility of your conversations. The service is free.
- If you’re running macOS High Sierra 10.13 or earlier versions of macOS, you should upgrade to a newer version of macOS immediately, as High Sierra and older versions are no longer supported by Apple and other software vendors.
- Did you know 44 of CU Boulder’s classrooms have a fully automated way to record and share lecture content? And if you’re not in one of those classrooms, there’s a mobile solution available.
- The Office of Information Technology has a service to help developers ensure they are meeting CU Boulder expectations and are able to get their applications onto the store(s) of their choice.
- Starting Dec. 22, instructors and students will be able to access Zoom directly from Canvas’s navigation bar through a new Canvas and Zoom integration.