How does the IU/Microsoft Campus Agreement affect me?
For information on the IU/Microsoft Campus Agreement (CA), including what software the CA covers, who is eligible to receive the software, and where to get the software, see IU's software agreement with Microsoft.
For more information on how the CA may affect you, see the appropriate section below:
On this page:
- Software choice
- Support for Microsoft products
- Windows operating system users
- Mozilla users
- Macintosh users
- Indiana University's email strategy
Software choice
The CA does not restrict Indiana University departments, faculty, staff, and students to using only Microsoft products. Through the CA, the university invests in Microsoft products that cover a broad spectrum of software needs. Since the CA provides purchased Microsoft products, the university has an economic incentive to use them. The university also proportionately devotes its support resources to the suite of products that the agreement provides. These two resource-dependent factors provide a strong incentive for IU to make use of the Microsoft products.
However, IU is free to use other resources, and to acquire and support a wide variety of vendor products. While the presence of Microsoft products does lead many users to adopt products covered under the licenses, IU may still acquire competing products that meet specific needs.
UITS continues to evaluate, deploy, and support products that are of value to the university community. Microsoft products are only a subset of the software applications that UITS reviews, supports, and distributes. IU continues to maintain many other site licenses for a variety of purposes.
For productivity software (e.g., word processor, spreadsheet, presentation), the university primarily distributes and supports Microsoft products. However, users at IU may choose from a full range of products from many vendors. For more information about software licenses, see the IUware license agreements page.
Back to topSupport for Microsoft products
The effect of the CA on users and non-UITS computing support providers is minimal. UITS provides primary product support via the Knowledge Base and front line support services, and second-level problem resolution via local, department-oriented services. UITS plays the main role in providing support for Microsoft products through the UITS Support Centers, and service teams oriented toward individual computing support providers.
The CA includes a Microsoft Premier Support Program membership for IU. This provides UITS with expanded access to Microsoft incident packs, and allows the university to open problem incidents with Microsoft on a case-by-case basis. Individual computing support providers and users cannot make problem calls directly to Microsoft; rather, UITS acts as a broker for problem resolution. This ensures that IU's user community first looks to local support staff, who open incidents with Microsoft only when they need assistance in resolving a problem. Once support staff receive an answer, the information is available to everyone.
UITS also delivers Microsoft education to individual computing support
providers in an intensive format through EdCert course
offerings. Microsoft education is available to computing support
providers who are registered local support providers
(LSPs). For more information, send an email message to
edcert@indiana.edu .
Windows operating system users
Note: UITS recommends that you use a current version of Windows on computers connected to the Indiana University network; see For Windows computers on the IU network, why does UITS recommend Windows 2000, XP Professional, or Vista Enterprise or Ultimate? Security features on the IU network prevent computers running older operating systems from authenticating to ADS, printing to some network printers in departments and campus housing, and mapping drives to other computers.
If you use Windows, UITS recommends Windows XP Professional, Windows Vista Enterprise or Ultimate, or Windows 2000 for both personally owned and departmentally owned computers at IU. Through the CA, Windows XP and Vista are available at a greatly reduced price to IU students, faculty, and staff.
For more information on how to obtain Windows XP or Vista, see IU's software agreement with Microsoft and consult the "Acquiring the software" section.
To make sure your computer is capable of an operating system upgrade, see What is Windows XP? or Information about Windows Vista, or ask your department's local support provider (LSP).
As part of the CA, when Microsoft releases new versions of its operating systems, students, faculty, and staff can upgrade to new versions at little or no cost, depending on the media used for installation. LSPs can contact LSP Services at 812-855-3008 about obtaining media for their departments.
Back to topMozilla users
At IU, the CA has no effect on the availability of Mozilla products, such as Firefox and Thunderbird. Mozilla products are open-source, and therefore available for free download; see What is Mozilla? IU students, faculty, and staff can also download Firefox and Thunderbird from IUware.
Back to topMacintosh users
At IU, the CA provides both Windows and Macintosh users with a number of popular Microsoft applications. For information on software available to Macintosh users, see IU's software agreement with Microsoft and consult the "Software available through the agreement" section.
Note: Mac OS X is produced by Apple Computer, Inc., and is not available under a campus agreement. In the Student Technology Centers (STCs), student and faculty demand determines equipment offerings.
Back to topIndiana University's email strategy
The CA has little impact on IU's general email strategy, but it does impact the quality and price of the messaging service. UITS continually researches ways to improve its messaging infrastructure. Given the complexity and centrality of messaging in the university, the strategy has always been to concentrate on providing a reliable and universal messaging backbone architecture that can support multiple clients through open protocols. Given the demand for support of mail-enabled applications and better desktop email integration, UITS constantly evaluates various solutions.
UITS was looking for a more comprehensive technology solution that would support all major messaging standards (SMTP, IMAP4, POP3, MAPI) in a single message store, and would be able to integrate with a single directory service, while at the same time providing a scalable, manageable, and robust backbone. In September 1997, after two years of testing various solutions, UITS deployed a limited Microsoft Exchange Server to augment the array of UITS messaging components. UITS believes that Microsoft Exchange Server architecture is a comprehensive solution.
The CA provides IU with access to the Microsoft Exchange Server technology group. This allows UITS to fine-tune and adapt the technology to IU's special needs through direct contact with Microsoft. The CA also gives UITS an essentially unlimited distribution of the Outlook client for Windows and Mac OS. This makes it easy to count on consistent user client interface availability throughout the institution. More importantly, it provides the functionality consistent with many IU users' demands.
The CA will not dictate IU's client-side strategy. UITS will always look for and support the best clients on the market. Clients like Outlook and Entourage will enrich the alternatives available to IU's computer users, and adding them will build on the choices currently available.
Back to topAlso see:
- Does IU's agreement with Microsoft mean that I don't have to buy an operating system with my new computer?
- If I have a previously illegal copy of software that is now offered under the IU/Microsoft Campus Agreement, is my software now considered a legal copy?
Last modified on September 19, 2008.






