UB Signs Contract with Microsoft to Provide Software to More than 29,000 Students, Faculty and Staff

Release Date: October 24, 2000 This content is archived.

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BUFFALO, N.Y. -- An agreement between the University at Buffalo and Microsoft will put into the hands of every one of UB's students and faculty and staff members the newest, most popular Microsoft software on the market while saving the university more than a quarter of a million dollars per year.

Considered to be the largest software-distribution program in the history of the university, the agreement provides full- and part-time students with nearly $1,000 worth of software.

The agreement is part of a contract that UB negotiated as the lead institution in discussions involving Microsoft and five other State University of New York campuses: the colleges of Technology at Alfred, Delhi and Morrisville, the College at Fredonia and the College of Optometry.

The UB contract involves the purchase of a campus-wide license by the university at a cost of approximately $492,000 that gives UB the right to access the software; an additional $92,000 was allocated to pay for the actual CDs that contain the software.

UB has more than 24,800 students and more than 5,100 faculty and staff members.

Students will benefit from the agreement even when they are no longer in school since, according to its terms, students own a license for the software, allowing them to keep it once they leave the university or graduate.

The cost of distributing the software to faculty and staff is being supported by the Office of the Chief Information Officer.

"The Microsoft contract provides all of us at UB -- faculty, staff and students -- with the latest productivity tools at a very reasonable institutional cost," said Voldemar Innus, UB's chief information officer, who signed the contract for the university. "The provision of this software also maximizes our ability to easily share information using a standard set of tools."

"The University at Buffalo should be commended for the work it is doing to create a seamless, connected, learning community for the students and faculty," said Anthony Salcito, Microsoft education director, East Region. "Microsoft is committed to working with schools and universities like UB to ensure that all students, faculty and staff have access to technology and the tools and skills to support learning today and for a lifetime."

Innus noted that the contract is a very important piece in the "iConnect@UB program," which encompasses all of the ways that UB prepares students for the "wired world" by making available to them the best IT tools.

UB was ranked 11th out of the "50 Most Wired Universities and Research Schools" in the nation in Yahoo! Internet Life's 2000 survey of the most wired colleges and universities in the nation.

"iConnect@UB is the way we live IT on this campus," added E. Bruce Pitman, Ph.D., UB vice provost for educational technology. "The Microsoft agreement is going to become a critical piece of that program by making student-faculty communication easier, while also boosting efficiency in campus operations."

Pitman said that the agreement was the result of an intensive team effort among IT staff across the university.

The Microsoft Campus Agreement will provide to all UB students, faculty and staff the following products:

• Microsoft Office 2000 and Microsoft Office 98 for Macintosh, which is the most widely used package of integrated productivity tools used to create, publish and analyze data; each includes Word for creating documents for print or publication on the Web, Microsoft Excel for developing charts views and graphs, PowerPoint for developing presentations that use images, clip art, animation, audio and video, and Outlook, which facilitates access to and organization of email, appointments and contacts, all information that can be shared with a Palm Pilot

• Visual Studio Professional for Windows for building and managing distributed applications

• FrontPage 2000 for Windows, a Web-authoring tool for creating and managing Web sites

• Windows 32-bit operating system upgrades

"This represents a huge cost savings for students," said Raymond Volpe, director of UB Micro, the university's nonprofit computer store that is responsible for duplicating and distributing the more than 30,000 CDs, and acting as reseller on the $1 million contract, providing the software to UB and the other SUNY campuses. "But even more importantly, it ensures that faculty and students will be working with the same IT tools, so document exchanges for class assignments go smoothly. Now, if someone sends you an email message with a document attached, you won't have to worry about whether or not you can open it."

Media Contact Information

Ellen Goldbaum
News Content Manager
Medicine
Tel: 716-645-4605
goldbaum@buffalo.edu