Federated Research Repository.

Conditions of Use:

  • You must not permit anyone to access the service using your user identification. You accept full responsibility for all aspects of use of the service associated with your user identification and password.
  • You must not disclose your user identification to anybody.
  • You must not store your user identification in any form, or location where it is capable of being read by anybody other than yourself. Treat it as you would your ATM PIN.
  • You must not use the Service for any activities which breach any laws, infringe a third party's rights, or breach any standards, content requirements or codes associated with any relevant authority or the policies of Bio21 and it collaborators.
  • We recommend you use Microsoft Windows XP Professional, Windows 2000 or Windows 98 to access this site.

Requirements to access Terminal Services

Use the Remote Desktop Connection software in Windows XP.

Operating System Requirements:
Any operating system can be used to connect to Terminal Services, but there are some version issues.

Connection Speed:
Terminal Services can run on a dial-up, dsl or cable connection though you will experience better performance on dsl or cable than on dial-up.

Terminal Services Procedures

Logging On
Use Your username and password to login to the Terminal Services. Please make sure the Log on to drop down field is set to MHMMIMTS (on this computer)

Procedure:

START, RUN, Open MSTSC, OK

Click 'Options', Local Resources Tab, Local Devices & Resources

Click 'Other', Drives (expand to select the ones you want)

Click 'Printers', 'Clipboard' to have access.

Click 'Connect' - enter credentials, OK

Logging On

Please be sure to press CTRL-ALT-END or click the logoff button on the desktop to end your session. Just closing your browser will leave your session open, causing problems later.

Storing Personal Files
Store all Personal Files on your network drives (i.e. H:) or on your local machine drives. Files stored on the local Terminal Server drives will be deleted.

Transferring Data Between Your Local Machine and The Terminal Servers
With the recent upgrade to Windows Server 2003, you can now access your local drives in your terminal session.

1. When you first click the connect button under 'Options' on the Resources Tab, make sure the check box next to Connect your local disk drives to the remote computer is checked.
2. If you open My Computer in the terminal session all your local drives will be listed under other. Use the drive as you would any other drive.

Printing to your Local Printer
Terminal Services uses printer redirects. In doing so, you can open a terminal session and print to your locally installed printers at home or the office.

Toggling your window
CTRL-ALT-PAUSE(break) will toggle your window between frame and full screen modes.

Connection Problems
There are occasionally a few users that get dropped from the terminal servers. In almost all cases this is due to the quality of the connection from the client's ISP. Poor connections are often caused by dropped packets or network congestion at the client's ISP. Information Services cannot resolve issues with quality of the connection from the client's ISP. If you repeatedly have dropped connections please try connecting at different times, switch your ISP or upgrade to broadband.

Your client will try to reconnect automatically to the terminal servers. When you see the red x in the upper right hand portion of the screen, that indicates you have lost the connection and it is trying to reconnect.

Remote Desktop Connection Software
You can use the Remote Desktop Connection software that is provided with Windows XP to connect to Terminal Servers.

  1. Open Remote Desktop Connection Software (All Programs>>Accessories>>Communications>>Remote Desktop Connection.)
  2. Type mmimsas.ssg.org.au in the Computer field in the Remote Desktop Connection window.
  3. Click the Options button.
  4. Select Local Resources.
  5. Check the box next to disk drives under Local Devices in the Local Resources section.
  6. Click the Connect button.

 

SAS Web Report Studio Link

SAS Web Report Studio lets you create, view, and save reports from your Web browser.
http://mmimsas.ssg.org.au/SASWebReportStudio/webreportstudio.jsp

 

Introduction to GGobi - http://www.ggobi.org/

Quote from GGobi website:

GGobi is an open source visualisation program for exploring high-dimensional data. It provides highly dynamic and interactive graphics such as tours, as well as familiar graphics such as the scatterplot, barchart and parallel coordinates plots. Plots are interactive and linked with brushing and identification.

GGobi is fully documented in the GGobi book: "Interactive and Dynamic Graphics for Data Analysis".

If you are interested in how GGobi came to be, you can read more about it on their history page.