PSU Guest WiFi for Linux

Mordac


Explanation

The Portland State University wireless internet network is available to the public - sorta. Other universities are more open: Washington State University Vancouver (totally open access), OHSU (click "I agree"), and University of Washington Seattle (closed but a librarian can give you a 3 month password, ask at the ground floor information desk at Allen Library). Portland State protects its network from random public abuse (or use) with a sign-in page that only works for Windoze and Mac, and a cellphone SMS passcode kludge that works for a long list of international providers (Nepal?) but not Oregon companies like Consumer Cellular. If you have an iPhone or Android, you can use the SMS kludge, but that means you already have a connection.

So - internet login it is. The email can go anywhere - but gmail is easy, sign in and open the mail and click. This is the only thing I use gmail for. Otherwise, I would rather not share my private email with Google Analytics and the NSA.

I don't know why the main PSU SSID suddenly becomes enabled for the reconnect, instead of staying on PSU Guest, but that is what what seems to work. Before fall 2015, you stayed on PSU Guest with no major hassle.

Mordac is the Preventer of Information Services, a character in the Dilbert comic strip, whose job is to make the computers in Dilbert's workplace inaccessable and impossible to use. There ought to be a mordac.pdx.edu server at PSU, explaining how to accomodate obstructive PSU IT behavior. The best explanation I can come up with is that if PSU students are permitted to use Linux, they will get high paying jobs using Linux in the Portland area, and PSU IT will lose a source of abusable underpaid labor. I assume PSU administration would rather have alumni paying off their student loans, then making donations, but if they complain too much then PSU IT will cut them off. Don't fuck with Mordac.