Subject: Managing administration of computer systems for conservation lab
In our Conservation Department we have one main conservation laboratory, one office dedicated to instrumental and microscopal analysis and another set of offices where our administrative operations are carried out. We are building an additional lab in another building and would like to not duplicate the problems we are experiencing in our main area now. Our conservation laboratory is equipped with laptops for each bench conservator. There are also desktop computers for our MuSIS system, graphics workstation and main documentation database and photo archive. Our analytical area where we house our FT-IR and UV-Vis spectrometers along with our polarizing microscope needs a computer upgrade at the moment. The problem which has developed over time is that State IT department controls access and everything else to do with our computers in the laboratory and analysis areas. We have encountered increasing problems with broken software installations over the past year or so, lost communications ports, etc. We lost effective use of our MuSIS system for several months. We eventually solved that problem ourselves as we wished to do. We can't install fresh copies of programs or attempt to fix even small problems as we lack the access permissions or are barred by policies. This is normal IT policy for administrative installations. An additional problem is that our intranet is shared with other departments and museum buildings through a terrible, choked route. We routinely access 8 to 100 meg digital files--or would like to. Usually we can take an extra lunch break waiting for some of the larger files to open up and these are only the 20 meg types. I am beginning the process of convincing the powers that be that we need to separate the conservation lab from the administrative side of things and that means taking back complete administration of the computer systems there, both software and hardware. We will build a separate intranet for the scientific analysis computers and the bench related laptops and the graphic workstation along with the documentation center. Although we are currently Windows based (2000 and XP), MacOS and Linux are certainly options depending up the needs. State IT will still control our administrative computers. I am a software designer and programmer as well so I have a reasonable idea of what needs to be done physically. However it is always a good idea to see what others have done or are trying to do. I would like to correspond with whoever has gone down this route to compare notes and take advantage of your experience in negotiating the bureaucratic maze. Mark MacKenzie Director of Conservation/Chief Conservator Museum Resources Division Department of Cultural Affairs Santa Fe, New Mexico 505-476-1236 Fax: 505-4761227 *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:60 Distributed: Friday, May 9, 2008 Message Id: cdl-21-60-018 ***Received on Thursday, 8 May, 2008