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February 22, 2017, at 12:30 PM by imranh - uws to swan uni
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'''Swansea University Computer Society''', known as '''SUCS''', is a student society at the [[http://www.swan.ac.uk/|University of Wales, Swansea]]. It offers computing facilities and social events to its members and other Swansea University societies.
to:
'''Swansea University Computer Society''', known as '''SUCS''', is a student society at [[https://www.swansea.ac.uk/|Swansea University]]. It offers computing facilities and social events to its members and other Swansea University societies.
May 03, 2015, at 06:59 PM by andy - More grammar!
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In 1999, The Students' Union allowed SUCS to set up a room of workstations for its members. This was originally on the third floor of the Student Union building in what used to be a debating room. Since this room is inside the building, it is only accessible during the hours the whole building is open.

In the summer of 1999 the society was moved to a much smaller room on the ground floor which has the advantage of an external door. SUCS fitted a magnetic stripe card reader and electronic lock to the door which enabled 24/7 access to the room by the members by means of their Student Union magnetic stripe cards. The door was connected to an old PC through an interface designed by Justin Mitchell and controlled through software written by Justin Mitchell and Steve Hill. The software was originally intended to be a stop-gap measure until something nicer looking could be written, but it stayed in service until the summer of 2005 when the card reader finally gave up. Replacement hardware was ordered and new software written by Dave Arter.  At the start of the 2006/2007 academic year, the university began issuing contactless smartcards instead of magnetic stripe cards.  A contactless smartcard reader was hurridly purchased and the software modified by Graham Cole and Chris Elsmore to allow SUCS room access to smartcard wielding members.
to:
In 1999, The Students' Union allowed SUCS to set up a room of workstations for its members. This was originally on the third floor of the Students' Union building in what used to be a debating room. Since this room is inside the building, it is only accessible during the hours the whole building is open.

In the summer of 1999 the society was moved to a much smaller room on the ground floor which has the advantage of an external door. SUCS fitted a magnetic stripe card reader and electronic lock to the door which enabled 24/7 access to the room by the members by means of their Students' Union magnetic stripe cards. The door was connected to an old PC through an interface designed by Justin Mitchell and controlled through software written by Justin Mitchell and Steve Hill. The software was originally intended to be a stop-gap measure until something nicer looking could be written, but it stayed in service until the summer of 2005 when the card reader finally gave up. Replacement hardware was ordered and new software written by Dave Arter.  At the start of the 2006/2007 academic year, the university began issuing contactless smart cards instead of magnetic stripe cards.  A contactless smart card reader was hurriedly purchased and the software modified by Graham Cole and Chris Elsmore to allow SUCS room access to smart card wielding members.
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The SUCS Library was founded in 1996 with the donation of a single copy of Prof. Fred Halsall's "Data Communications, Networks and Open Systems". It was originally envisaged as a way to use the (rather small) grant from the Student Union in a way which was allowed under their rules, which would not allow the grant to be used for the purchase of hardware. Eventually the rules were changed preventing this (and later the grant abolished altogether), but the library continues to attract donations of books from a number of sources and is used by a large number of the members.
to:
The SUCS Library was founded in 1996 with the donation of a single copy of Prof. Fred Halsall's "Data Communications, Networks and Open Systems". It was originally envisaged as a way to use the (rather small) grant from the Students' Union in a way which was allowed under their rules, which would not allow the grant to be used for the purchase of hardware. Eventually the rules were changed preventing this (and later the grant abolished altogether), but the library continues to attract donations of books from a number of sources and is used by a large number of the members.
May 03, 2015, at 06:58 PM by andy - Grammar!
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The society was founded as a result of an idea by Alex Williams and Robin O'Leary. The first executive committee of the society were Andy Parkman, Alex Williams and Robin O'Leary in 1988. At this point in time the society was a computer science society. In the early 1990s the university computer centre donated the society an old [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NCR_Corporation|NCR TOWER 16/32]] system. This was used to provide a variety of services including a bulletin board as well as to teach students system administration skills. At the time the university had large centralised computer systems so the computer science department had no way to teach such skills. Over time the membership became less computer science focused and the society became the computer society, and then to fit student union rules at the time the Swansea University Computer Society. Since then it has gone from strength to strength, gaining its own computer room in the Students' Union building and establishing its own small network of servers and workstations.
to:
The society was founded as a result of an idea by Alex Williams and Robin O'Leary. The first executive committee of the society were Andy Parkman, Alex Williams and Robin O'Leary in 1988. At this point in time the society was a computer science society. In the early 1990s the university computer centre donated the society an old [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NCR_Corporation|NCR TOWER 16/32]] system. This was used to provide a variety of services including a bulletin board as well as to teach students system administration skills. At the time the university had large centralised computer systems so the computer science department had no way to teach such skills. Over time the membership became less computer science focused and the society became the computer society, and then to fit Students' Union rules at the time the Swansea University Computer Society. Since then it has gone from strength to strength, gaining its own computer room in the Students' Union building and establishing its own small network of servers and workstations.
June 06, 2009, at 10:27 PM by Andy - Too many 'and's
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The more enthusiastic SUCS members regularly set themselves interesting programming and system development projects, both personal and group projects with other members. Examples of personal projects are personal websites, utility programs and scripts to help with SUCS administration, instant messaging software and ipod interface software development and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PIC_microcontroller|PIC microcontroller]] programming.
to:
The more enthusiastic SUCS members regularly set themselves interesting programming and system development projects, both personal and group projects with other members. Examples of personal projects are personal websites, utility programs and scripts to help with SUCS administration, instant messaging software, ipod interface software development and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PIC_microcontroller|PIC microcontroller]] programming.
May 09, 2009, at 11:31 PM by Alex Williams - It was my idea, and we were the first committee.
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The first documented executive committee of the society were Andy Parkman, Alex Williams and Robin O'Leary in 1988. At this point in time the society was a computer science society. In the early 1990s the university computer centre donated the society an old [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NCR_Corporation|NCR TOWER 16/32]] system. This was used to provide a variety of services including a bulletin board as well as to teach students system administration skills. At the time the university had large centralised computer systems so the computer science department had no way to teach such skills. Over time the membership became less computer science focused and the society became the computer society, and then to fit student union rules at the time the Swansea University Computer Society. Since then it has gone from strength to strength, gaining its own computer room in the Students' Union building and establishing its own small network of servers and workstations.
to:
The society was founded as a result of an idea by Alex Williams and Robin O'Leary. The first executive committee of the society were Andy Parkman, Alex Williams and Robin O'Leary in 1988. At this point in time the society was a computer science society. In the early 1990s the university computer centre donated the society an old [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NCR_Corporation|NCR TOWER 16/32]] system. This was used to provide a variety of services including a bulletin board as well as to teach students system administration skills. At the time the university had large centralised computer systems so the computer science department had no way to teach such skills. Over time the membership became less computer science focused and the society became the computer society, and then to fit student union rules at the time the Swansea University Computer Society. Since then it has gone from strength to strength, gaining its own computer room in the Students' Union building and establishing its own small network of servers and workstations.
January 13, 2008, at 09:51 PM by welshbyte - Rid this page of a huge number of pointless wikipedia links and clean up some language
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'''Swansea University Computer Society''', known as '''SUCS''', is a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Student_society|student society]] at the [[http://www.swan.ac.uk/|University of Wales, Swansea]]. It offers [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computing|computing facilities]] and social events to its members and other Swansea University societies.

As of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005|2005]], SUCS had in excess of 180 members, making it one of
the largest societies in the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University|University]]. Its membership comprises [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Students|students]], postgraduates, and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alumni|alumni]] who have earned life membership from the society. A number of other Swansea University societies are also members of SUCS and take advantage of the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer|computer]] facilities and 24 hour access that the society provides.
to:
'''Swansea University Computer Society''', known as '''SUCS''', is a student society at the [[http://www.swan.ac.uk/|University of Wales, Swansea]]. It offers computing facilities and social events to its members and other Swansea University societies.

As of 2005, SUCS had in excess of 180 members, making it one of the largest societies in
the University. Its membership comprises undergraduate and postgraduate students and alumni who have earned life membership from the society. A number of other Swansea University societies are also members of SUCS and take advantage of the computer facilities and 24 hour access that the society provides.
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The first documented executive [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Committee|committee]] of the society were Andy Parkman, Alex Williams and Robin O'Leary in [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1988|1988]]. At this point in time the society was a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_science|computer science]] society. In the early [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1990s|1990s]] the university computer centre donated the society an old [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NCR_Corporation|NCR TOWER 16/32]] system. This was used to provide a variety of services including a bulletin board as well as to teach students system administration skills. At the time the university had large centralised computer systems so the computer science department had no way to teach such skills. Over time the membership became less computer science focused and the society became the computer society, and then to fit student union rules at the time the Swansea University Computer Society. Since then it has gone from strength to strength, gaining its own computer room in the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Students%27_Union|Students' Union]] building and establishing its own small [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_network|network]] of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Server_%28computing%29|servers]] and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Workstations|workstations]].

[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Cox|Alan Cox]] used one of the SUCS computers to help reproduce major problems in the early [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux|Linux]] [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TCP/IP|TCP/IP]]
stack.
to:
The first documented executive committee of the society were Andy Parkman, Alex Williams and Robin O'Leary in 1988. At this point in time the society was a computer science society. In the early 1990s the university computer centre donated the society an old [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NCR_Corporation|NCR TOWER 16/32]] system. This was used to provide a variety of services including a bulletin board as well as to teach students system administration skills. At the time the university had large centralised computer systems so the computer science department had no way to teach such skills. Over time the membership became less computer science focused and the society became the computer society, and then to fit student union rules at the time the Swansea University Computer Society. Since then it has gone from strength to strength, gaining its own computer room in the Students' Union building and establishing its own small network of servers and workstations.

Linux developer
[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Cox|Alan Cox]] used one of the SUCS computers to help reproduce major problems in the early Linux TCP/IP stack.
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Due to the SUCS machine being on a bridged university network making extensive use of other [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communications_protocol|protocols]], it was seeing more unusual traffic patterns in a couple of hours than other Linux developers would see in a week. [[http://groups.google.com/group/comp.os.linux.misc/msg/6550504c2e149d35|#]]
to:
Due to the SUCS machine being on a bridged university network making extensive use of other protocols, it was seeing more unusual traffic patterns in a couple of hours than other Linux developers would see in a week. [[http://groups.google.com/group/comp.os.linux.misc/msg/6550504c2e149d35|#]]
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The society is governed by an executive committee comprised of a number of annually elected  [[http://sucs.org/About/Staff|executive officers]]; a president, a treasurer, a secretary and, as of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000|2000]], a publicity officer. Additionally, there is an [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_administrator|technical admin]] team who handle technical matters such as the day to day running of the systems. New members of the admin team are chosen from some of the most competent and experienced SUCS members by the existing admin team.  Historically, the elected committee themselves are not necessarily technical (and thus not necessarily members of the admin team).
to:
The society is governed by an executive committee comprised of a number of annually elected  [[http://sucs.org/About/Staff|executive officers]]; a president, a treasurer, a secretary and, as of 2000, a publicity officer. Additionally, there is a technical administration team which handles technical matters such as the day to day running of the systems. New members of the admin team are chosen from some of the most competent and experienced SUCS members by the existing admin team.  Historically, the elected committee themselves are not necessarily technical (and thus not necessarily members of the admin team).
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In [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1999|1999]], The Students' Union allowed SUCS to set up a room of workstations for its members. This was originally on the third floor of the Student Union building in what used to be a debating room. Since this room is inside the building, it is only accessible during the hours the whole building is open.

In the summer of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1999|1999]] the society was moved to a much smaller room on the ground floor. Despite the small size of the new room, this was generally considered to be a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good_Thing|Good Thing]] since the room now had its own external door. SUCS fitted a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_stripe|magnetic stripe]] card reader and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_lock|electronic lock]] to the door which enabled [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/24/7|24/7]] access to the room by the members by means of their Student Union magnetic stripe cards. The door was connected to an old PC through an interface designed by Justin Mitchell (A.K.A. Arthur) and controlled through software written by Justin Mitchell and Steve Hill (A.K.A. FireFury). The software was originally intended to be a stop-gap measure until something nicer looking could be written, but it stayed in service until the summer of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005|2005]] when the card reader finally gave up. Replacement hardware was ordered and new software written by Dave Arter (A.K.A. davea).  At the start of the 2006/2007 academic year, the university began issuing contactless smartcards instead of magnetic stripe cards.  A contactless smartcard reader was hurridly purchased and the software modified by Graham Cole (A.K.A. Chckens) and Chris Elsmore (A.K.A. Elsmorian).
to:
In 1999, The Students' Union allowed SUCS to set up a room of workstations for its members. This was originally on the third floor of the Student Union building in what used to be a debating room. Since this room is inside the building, it is only accessible during the hours the whole building is open.

In the summer of 1999 the society was moved to a much smaller room on the ground floor which has the advantage of an external door. SUCS fitted a magnetic stripe card reader and electronic lock to the door which enabled 24/7 access to the room by the members by means of their Student Union magnetic stripe cards. The door was connected to an old PC through an interface designed by Justin Mitchell and controlled through software written by Justin Mitchell and Steve Hill. The software was originally intended to be a stop-gap measure until something nicer looking could be written, but it stayed in service until the summer of 2005 when the card reader finally gave up. Replacement hardware was ordered and new software written by Dave Arter.  At the start of the 2006/2007 academic year, the university began issuing contactless smartcards instead of magnetic stripe cards.  A contactless smartcard reader was hurridly purchased and the software modified by Graham Cole and Chris Elsmore to allow SUCS room access to smartcard wielding members.
Changed lines 36-37 from:
SUCS has a network of around ten desktop computers which are available around the clock for use by its members. These run the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Hat|Red Hat]]-sponsored Linux distribution, [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fedora_Core|Fedora Core]], except for the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gateway_%28telecommunications%29|gateway]] connecting it to the University network, which runs [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debian_GNU/Linux|Debian GNU/Linux]]. Members can also access their files remotely and connect their own laptops to the network in the society's computer room. Among the services provided by the society are web space, [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spam_%28electronic%29|spam]] filtered email, free laser printing, a growing library of computer related books, mailing lists and a programming advisory service.
to:
SUCS has a network of around ten desktop computers which are available around the clock for use by its members. These run the Red Hat-sponsored Linux distribution, Fedora, except for the gateway connecting it to the University network, which runs Debian GNU/Linux. Members can also access their files remotely and connect their own laptops to the network in the society's computer room. Among the services provided by the society are web space, junk-filtered email, free laser printing, a growing library of computer related books, mailing lists and a programming advisory service.
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As well as meeting each other in the SUCS computer room (known colloquially as "the room"), members also log into the society's [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulletin_board|bulletin board]] and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talker|talker]] called Milliways III (named after the restaurant in [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hitchhiker%27s_Guide_to_the_Galaxy|The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy]]). Non-members are also welcome on Milliways and a number of non-members and ex-members can often be found there. The community on Milliways III is usually quite jovial and the combination of younger members (who bring new technologies and viewpoints to the group) and older, more experienced graduates, can be very technically helpful.

Traditionally, at the end of the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academic_year|academic year]], SUCS holds a
beach party on [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swansea|Swansea]] beach. The party attracts many of the ex-members and life members as well as the current members and serves well as a reunion for those who have left the Swansea area. The party usually involves a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbecue|barbecue]], [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonfire|bonfire]] and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beer|beer]] and usually runs from around 19:00 through until after [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunrise|sunrise]].

The more enthusiastic SUCS members regularly set themselves interesting programming and system development projects, both personal and group projects with other members. Examples of personal projects are personal websites, utility programs and scripts to help with SUCS administration, instant messaging software and ipod interface software development and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PIC_microcontroller|PIC microcontroller]] programming.

!!External Link
* [[http://sucs.org|Swansea University Computer Society website]]
to:
As well as meeting each other in the SUCS computer room (known colloquially as "the room"), members also log into the society's bulletin board/talker system, Milliways (named after the restaurant in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams). Non-members are also welcome on Milliways and a number of non-members and ex-members can often be found there. The community on Milliways is usually quite jovial and the combination of younger members (who bring new technologies and viewpoints to the group) and older, more experienced graduates, can be very technically helpful.

At the end of each academic year, SUCS traditionally holds a beach party on Swansea
beach which is conveniently situated just across the road from the university. The party attracts many of the ex-members and life members as well as the current members and serves well as a reunion for those who have left the Swansea area. The party usually involves a barbecue, bonfire and beer and usually runs from around 19:00 through until after sunrise.

The more enthusiastic SUCS members regularly set themselves interesting programming and system development projects, both personal and group projects with other members. Examples of personal projects are personal websites, utility programs and scripts to help with SUCS administration, instant messaging software and ipod interface software development and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PIC_microcontroller|PIC microcontroller]] programming.
January 13, 2008, at 09:27 PM by welshbyte - Prune half a chapter The Rebel Code from this page
Deleted lines 16-26:

%box% "So we started putting newer versions on it, and the machine would fall over more or less regularly each time" despite the updated code, Cox recalls. The reason was significant: "We were actually one of the few people who, it turned out, had a Linux box on a very busy multiprotocol network." That is, they were testing the code in a new and extreme situation. [[<<]] [--The Rebel Code : the inside story of Linux and the open source revolution / Glyn Moody, pages 76-77, ISBN 9780738206707 0738203335--]

%box% "The thing about busy networks is you get very large amounts of data and you also get interesting timings," Cox explains. "One of the big problems debugging a networking setup is a lot of timing-related bugs only show up on busy networks. So people were seeing that code as being not stable, but it would fall over every few days. Whereas we were in a position where the same bug would fall over every few minutes." [[<<]] [--The Rebel Code : the inside story of Linux and the open source revolution / Glyn Moody, pages 76-77, ISBN 9780738206707 0738203335--]

%box% Cox appreciated that what seemed to be bad luck (that their busy network caused the networking code to fall over quickly) was a stroke of fortune for Linux because "we had a great testing ground for it." As a result, he says, "I started sending Ross fixes." Ross Biro stopped then working on the networking code, and Fred van Kempen took over. [[<<]] [--The Rebel Code : the inside story of Linux and the open source revolution / Glyn Moody, pages 76-77, ISBN 9780738206707 0738203335--]

%box% Cox does not hide his skepticism about Fred van Kempen's plans: "Fred decided that he was going to rewrite it all, grand wondrous vision, everything out of Fred Brooks [of /The Mythical Man-Month/ fame] you shouldn't do. In the meantime, while he was doing that, I started releasing patches which were basically just a collection of fixes." [[<<]] [--The Rebel Code : the inside story of Linux and the open source revolution / Glyn Moody, pages 76-77, ISBN 9780738206707 0738203335--]

%box% As the Networking-Howto puts it, he did this with "some good success and his first version of Linux networking code was called 'Net-2D(ebugged).' The code worked reliably in many typical configurations and the user base was happy. Alan clearly had ideas and skills of his own to contribute to the project and many discussions relating to the direction the net-2 code was heading ensued." These discussions sharpened until "there developed two distinct schools within the Linux networking community, one that had the philosophy of 'make it work first, then make it better' and the other of 'make it better first,'" as the Networking-Howto puts it. [[<<]] [--The Rebel Code : the inside story of Linux and the open source revolution / Glyn Moody, pages 76-77, ISBN 9780738206707 0738203335--]

January 13, 2008, at 09:22 PM by welshbyte - Add LKML link
Added lines 35-36:

The message was removed in a [[http://lkml.org/lkml/2003/2/11/49|patch]] by Pavel Machek which was committed by Rusty Russell on April Fool's day, 2003.
January 13, 2008, at 08:49 PM by Sitsofe - Updated and linked kernel version startup message was removed in
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Up until the 2.4.19 kernel SUCS was also name-checked in the Linux TCP/IP stack:
to:
Up [[http://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/tglx/history.git;a=commitdiff;h=9eb42d7c2fafb25a28972b57095c87d56f8bd21d|until the 2.5.66 kernel]] SUCS was also name-checked in the Linux TCP/IP stack on start up:
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The society is governed by an executive committee comprised of a number of annually elected  [[http://sucs.org/About/Staff|executive officers]]; a president, a treasurer, a secretary and, as of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000|2000]], a publicity officer. Additionally, there is an [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_administrator|technical admin]] team who handle technical matters such as the day to day running of the systems. New members of the admin team are chosen from some of the most competent and experienced SUCS members by the existing admin team.  Historically, the elected committee themselves are not necessarily technical (and thus not necessarilly members of the admin team).
to:
The society is governed by an executive committee comprised of a number of annually elected  [[http://sucs.org/About/Staff|executive officers]]; a president, a treasurer, a secretary and, as of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000|2000]], a publicity officer. Additionally, there is an [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_administrator|technical admin]] team who handle technical matters such as the day to day running of the systems. New members of the admin team are chosen from some of the most competent and experienced SUCS members by the existing admin team.  Historically, the elected committee themselves are not necessarily technical (and thus not necessarily members of the admin team).
Changed line 37 from:
The society is governed by an executive committee comprised of a number of annually elected  [[http://sucs.org/About/Staff|executive officers]]; a president, a treasurer, a secretary and, as of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000|2000]], a publicity officer. Additionally, there is an [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_administrator|technical admin]] team who handle technical matters such as the day to day running of the systems. New members of the admin team are chosen from some of the most competent and experienced SUCS members by the existing admin team.  Historically, the elected committee themselves are not necessarilly technical (and thus not necessarilly members of the admin team).
to:
The society is governed by an executive committee comprised of a number of annually elected  [[http://sucs.org/About/Staff|executive officers]]; a president, a treasurer, a secretary and, as of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000|2000]], a publicity officer. Additionally, there is an [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_administrator|technical admin]] team who handle technical matters such as the day to day running of the systems. New members of the admin team are chosen from some of the most competent and experienced SUCS members by the existing admin team.  Historically, the elected committee themselves are not necessarily technical (and thus not necessarilly members of the admin team).
August 26, 2007, at 02:26 PM by frosty - Added quotes from Rebel Code (provided by sits) - could do with a bit more description, though
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%define=box block bgcolor=#ffffff padding=1em border="1px dashed #e76808"%

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[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Cox|Alan Cox]] used one of the SUCS computers to help reproduce major problems in the early [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux|Linux]] [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TCP/IP|TCP/IP]] stack. Due to the SUCS machine being on a bridged university network making extensive use of other [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communications_protocol|protocols]], it was seeing more unusual traffic patterns in a couple of hours than other Linux developers would see in a week. [[http://groups.google.com/group/comp.os.linux.misc/msg/6550504c2e149d35|#]]
to:
[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Cox|Alan Cox]] used one of the SUCS computers to help reproduce major problems in the early [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux|Linux]] [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TCP/IP|TCP/IP]] stack.

%box% Although he had left the university in Swansea some time before, Cox stayed in touch with his friends there and helped them out with the machine used by the university's computer society. They decided to try out Ross Biro recently released networking code. “We put
[the PC] in the campus [network]" he says, "and we plugged it in and we booted the wondrous TCP/IP code -- and it fell over. [[<<]] [--The Rebel Code : the inside story of Linux and the open source revolution / Glyn Moody, pages 76-77, ISBN 9780738206707 0738203335--]

Due to the SUCS machine being on a bridged university network making extensive use of other [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communications_protocol|protocols]], it was seeing more unusual traffic patterns in a couple of hours than other Linux developers would see in a week. [[http://groups.google.com/group/comp.os.linux.misc/msg/6550504c2e149d35|#]]

%box% "So we started putting newer versions on it, and the machine would fall over more or less regularly each time" despite the updated code, Cox recalls. The reason was significant: "We were actually one of the few people who, it turned out, had a Linux box on a very busy multiprotocol network." That is, they were testing the code in a new and extreme situation. [[<<]] [--The Rebel Code : the inside story of Linux and the open source revolution / Glyn Moody, pages 76-77, ISBN 9780738206707 0738203335--]

%box% "The thing about busy networks is you get very large amounts of data and you also get interesting timings," Cox explains. "One of the big problems debugging a networking setup is a lot of timing-related bugs only show up on busy networks. So people were seeing that code as being not stable, but it would fall over every few days. Whereas we were in a position where the same bug would fall over every few minutes." [[<<]] [--The Rebel Code : the inside story of Linux and the open source revolution / Glyn Moody, pages 76-77, ISBN 9780738206707 0738203335--]

%box% Cox appreciated that what seemed to be bad luck (that their busy network caused the networking code to fall over quickly) was a stroke of fortune for Linux because "we had a great testing ground for it." As a result, he says, "I started sending Ross fixes." Ross Biro stopped then working on the networking code, and Fred van Kempen took over. [[<<]] [--The Rebel Code : the inside story of Linux and the open source revolution / Glyn Moody, pages 76-77, ISBN 9780738206707 0738203335--]

%box% Cox does not hide his skepticism about Fred van Kempen's plans: "Fred decided that he was going to rewrite it all, grand wondrous vision, everything out of Fred Brooks [of /The Mythical Man-Month/ fame] you shouldn't do. In the meantime, while he was doing that, I started releasing patches which were basically just a collection of fixes." [[<<]] [--The Rebel Code : the inside story of Linux and the open source revolution / Glyn Moody, pages 76-77, ISBN 9780738206707 0738203335--]

%box% As the Networking-Howto puts it, he did this with "some good success and his first version of Linux networking code was called 'Net-2D(ebugged).' The code worked reliably in many typical configurations and the user base was happy. Alan clearly had ideas and skills of his own to contribute to the project and many discussions relating to the direction the net-2 code was heading ensued." These discussions sharpened until "there developed two distinct schools within the Linux networking community, one that had the philosophy of 'make it work first, then make it better' and the other of 'make it better first,'" as the Networking-Howto puts it. [[<<]] [--The Rebel Code : the inside story of Linux and the open source revolution / Glyn Moody, pages 76-77, ISBN 9780738206707 0738203335--]


Deleted lines 29-30:

%define=box block bgcolor=#ffffff padding=1em border="1px dashed #e76808"%
August 07, 2007, at 07:26 PM by FireFury - Stuff about the sucs library
Changed line 33 from:
The SUCS Library was founded in 1996 with the donation of a single copy of Prof. Fred Halsall's "Data Communications, Networks and Open Systems". It was originally envisaged as a way to use the (rather small) grant from the Student Union in a way which was allowed under their rules. Eventually the rules were changed preventing this, but the library continues to attract donations of books from a number of sources and is used by a large number of the members.
to:
The SUCS Library was founded in 1996 with the donation of a single copy of Prof. Fred Halsall's "Data Communications, Networks and Open Systems". It was originally envisaged as a way to use the (rather small) grant from the Student Union in a way which was allowed under their rules, which would not allow the grant to be used for the purchase of hardware. Eventually the rules were changed preventing this (and later the grant abolished altogether), but the library continues to attract donations of books from a number of sources and is used by a large number of the members.
August 07, 2007, at 07:19 PM by FireFury - Stuff about card access
Changed line 26 from:
In the summer of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1999|1999]] the society was moved to a much smaller room on the ground floor. Despite the small size of the new room, this was generally considered to be a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good_Thing|Good Thing]] since the room now had its own external door. SUCS fitted a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_stripe|magnetic stripe]] card reader and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_lock|electronic lock]] to the door which enabled [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/24/7|24/7]] access to the room by the members. The door was connected to an old PC through an interface designed by Justin Mitchell (A.K.A. Arthur) and controlled through software written by Justin Mitchell and Steve Hill (A.K.A. FireFury). The software was originally intended to be a stop-gap measure until something nicer looking could be written, but it stayed in service until the summer of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005|2005]] when the card reader finally gave up. Replacement hardware was ordered and new software written by Dave Arter (A.K.A. davea).
to:
In the summer of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1999|1999]] the society was moved to a much smaller room on the ground floor. Despite the small size of the new room, this was generally considered to be a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good_Thing|Good Thing]] since the room now had its own external door. SUCS fitted a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_stripe|magnetic stripe]] card reader and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_lock|electronic lock]] to the door which enabled [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/24/7|24/7]] access to the room by the members by means of their Student Union magnetic stripe cards. The door was connected to an old PC through an interface designed by Justin Mitchell (A.K.A. Arthur) and controlled through software written by Justin Mitchell and Steve Hill (A.K.A. FireFury). The software was originally intended to be a stop-gap measure until something nicer looking could be written, but it stayed in service until the summer of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005|2005]] when the card reader finally gave up. Replacement hardware was ordered and new software written by Dave Arter (A.K.A. davea).  At the start of the 2006/2007 academic year, the university began issuing contactless smartcards instead of magnetic stripe cards.  A contactless smartcard reader was hurridly purchased and the software modified by Graham Cole (A.K.A. Chckens) and Chris Elsmore (A.K.A. Elsmorian).
August 07, 2007, at 07:12 PM by FireFury - Adjusted the blurb about the selection of admin team members
Changed line 21 from:
The society is governed by a committee comprised of a number of annually elected  [[http://sucs.org/About/Staff|executive officers]]; a president, a treasurer, a secretary and, as of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000|2000]], a publicity officer. Additionally, an [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_administrator|admin]] team chosen by the committee from some of the most competent and experienced SUCS members completes the committee structure.
to:
The society is governed by an executive committee comprised of a number of annually elected  [[http://sucs.org/About/Staff|executive officers]]; a president, a treasurer, a secretary and, as of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000|2000]], a publicity officer. Additionally, there is an [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_administrator|technical admin]] team who handle technical matters such as the day to day running of the systems. New members of the admin team are chosen from some of the most competent and experienced SUCS members by the existing admin team.  Historically, the elected committee themselves are not necessarilly technical (and thus not necessarilly members of the admin team).
August 06, 2007, at 10:32 AM by 195.171.2.23 -
Added lines 30-33:

!!Library

The SUCS Library was founded in 1996 with the donation of a single copy of Prof. Fred Halsall's "Data Communications, Networks and Open Systems". It was originally envisaged as a way to use the (rather small) grant from the Student Union in a way which was allowed under their rules. Eventually the rules were changed preventing this, but the library continues to attract donations of books from a number of sources and is used by a large number of the members.
August 05, 2007, at 07:04 PM by 213.105.224.15 -
Changed lines 21-22 from:
The (non-technical) [[http://sucs.org/About/Staff|executive committee]] is made up of an annually elected president, a treasurer, a secretary and, as of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000|2000]], a publicity officer. Additionally, an [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_administrator|admin]] team made up of some of the most competent and experienced SUCS members exists to offer [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technical_support|technical support]] and administration of the SUCS network. Elections for new executive committees are held at the end of the calendar year.
to:
The society is governed by a committee comprised of a number of annually elected  [[http://sucs.org/About/Staff|executive officers]]; a president, a treasurer, a secretary and, as of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000|2000]], a publicity officer. Additionally, an [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_administrator|admin]] team chosen by the committee from some of the most competent and experienced SUCS members completes the committee structure.
Changed line 39 from:
* [[http://sucs.org|Swansea University Computer Society website]]
to:
* [[http://sucs.org|Swansea University Computer Society website]]
August 05, 2007, at 06:58 PM by pwb - fix typos
Changed lines 9-10 from:
[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Cox|Alan Cox]] used one of the SUCS computers to help reproduce major problems in the early [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux|Linux]] [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TCP/IP|TCP/IP]] stack. Due to the SUCS machine being on a bridged university network making extensive use of other [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communications_protocol|protocols]], it was seeing more unusual traffic patterns in a couple of hours that other Linux developers would see in a week. [[http://groups.google.com/group/comp.os.linux.misc/msg/6550504c2e149d35|#]]
to:
[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Cox|Alan Cox]] used one of the SUCS computers to help reproduce major problems in the early [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux|Linux]] [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TCP/IP|TCP/IP]] stack. Due to the SUCS machine being on a bridged university network making extensive use of other [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communications_protocol|protocols]], it was seeing more unusual traffic patterns in a couple of hours than other Linux developers would see in a week. [[http://groups.google.com/group/comp.os.linux.misc/msg/6550504c2e149d35|#]]
Changed line 34 from:
Traditionally, at the end of the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academic_year|academic year]], SUCS holds a beach party on [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swansea|Swansea]] beach. The party attracts many of the ex-members and life members as well as the current members and serves well as a reunion for those who have left the Swansea area. The party usually involves a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbecue|barbecue]], [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonfire|bonfire]] and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beer|beer]] and usually runs from around 19:00 through until after http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunrise|sunrise]].
to:
Traditionally, at the end of the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academic_year|academic year]], SUCS holds a beach party on [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swansea|Swansea]] beach. The party attracts many of the ex-members and life members as well as the current members and serves well as a reunion for those who have left the Swansea area. The party usually involves a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbecue|barbecue]], [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonfire|bonfire]] and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beer|beer]] and usually runs from around 19:00 through until after [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunrise|sunrise]].
Changed lines 24-27 from:
In 1999, The Students' Union allowed SUCS to set up a room of workstations for its members. This was originally on the third floor of the Student Union building in what used to be a debating room. Since this room is inside the building, it is only accessible during the hours the whole building is open.

In the summer of 1999 the society was moved to a much smaller room on the ground floor. Despite the small size of the new room, this was generally considered to be a Good Thing since the room now had its own external door. SUCS fitted a magnetic stripe card reader and electronic lock to the door which enabled 24/7 access to the room by the members. The door was connected to an old PC through an interface designed by Justin Mitchell (A.K.A. Arthur) and controlled through software written by Justin Mitchell and Steve Hill (A.K.A. FireFury). The software was originally intended to be a stop-gap measure until something nicer looking could be written, but it stayed in service until the summer of 2005 when the card reader finally gave up. Replacement hardware was ordered and new software written by Dave Arter (A.K.A. davea).
to:
In [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1999|1999]], The Students' Union allowed SUCS to set up a room of workstations for its members. This was originally on the third floor of the Student Union building in what used to be a debating room. Since this room is inside the building, it is only accessible during the hours the whole building is open.

In the summer of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1999|1999]] the society was moved to a much smaller room on the ground floor. Despite the small size of the new room, this was generally considered to be a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good_Thing|Good Thing]] since the room now had its own external door. SUCS fitted a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_stripe|magnetic stripe]] card reader and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_lock|electronic lock]] to the door which enabled [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/24/7|24/7]] access to the room by the members. The door was connected to an old PC through an interface designed by Justin Mitchell (A.K.A. Arthur) and controlled through software written by Justin Mitchell and Steve Hill (A.K.A. FireFury). The software was originally intended to be a stop-gap measure until something nicer looking could be written, but it stayed in service until the summer of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005|2005]] when the card reader finally gave up. Replacement hardware was ordered and new software written by Dave Arter (A.K.A. davea).
Changed lines 29-30 from:
SUCS has a network of around ten desktop computers which are available around the clock for use by its members. These run the Red Hat-sponsored Linux distribution, Fedora Core, except for the gateway connecting it to the University network, which runs Debian GNU/Linux. Members can also access their files remotely and connect their own laptops to the network in the society's computer room. Among the services provided by the society are web space, spam filtered email, free laser printing, a growing library of computer related books, mailing lists and a programming advisory service.
to:
SUCS has a network of around ten desktop computers which are available around the clock for use by its members. These run the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Hat|Red Hat]]-sponsored Linux distribution, [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fedora_Core|Fedora Core]], except for the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gateway_%28telecommunications%29|gateway]] connecting it to the University network, which runs [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debian_GNU/Linux|Debian GNU/Linux]]. Members can also access their files remotely and connect their own laptops to the network in the society's computer room. Among the services provided by the society are web space, [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spam_%28electronic%29|spam]] filtered email, free laser printing, a growing library of computer related books, mailing lists and a programming advisory service.
Changed lines 32-36 from:
As well as meeting each other in the SUCS computer room (known colloquially as "the room"), members also log into the society's bulletin board and talker called Milliways III (named after the restaurant in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy). Non-members are also welcome on Milliways and a number of non-members and ex-members can often be found there. The community on Milliways III is usually quite jovial and the combination of younger members (who bring new technologies and viewpoints to the group) and older, more experienced graduates, can be very technically helpful.

Traditionally
, at the end of the academic year, SUCS holds a beach party on Swansea beach. The party attracts many of the ex-members and life members as well as the current members and serves well as a reunion for those who have left the Swansea area. The party usually involves a barbecue, bonfire and beer and usually runs from around 19:00 through until after sunrise.

The more enthusiastic SUCS members regularly set themselves interesting programming and system development projects, both personal and group projects with other members
. Examples of personal projects are personal websites, utility programs and scripts to help with SUCS administration, instant messaging software and ipod interface software development and PIC microcontroller programming.
to:
As well as meeting each other in the SUCS computer room (known colloquially as "the room"), members also log into the society's [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulletin_board|bulletin board]] and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talker|talker]] called Milliways III (named after the restaurant in [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hitchhiker%27s_Guide_to_the_Galaxy|The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy]]). Non-members are also welcome on Milliways and a number of non-members and ex-members can often be found there. The community on Milliways III is usually quite jovial and the combination of younger members (who bring new technologies and viewpoints to the group) and older, more experienced graduates, can be very technically helpful.

Traditionally, at the end of the [[http://en
.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academic_year|academic year]], SUCS holds a beach party on [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swansea|Swansea]] beach. The party attracts many of the ex-members and life members as well as the current members and serves well as a reunion for those who have left the Swansea area. The party usually involves a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbecue|barbecue]], [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonfire|bonfire]] and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beer|beer]] and usually runs from around 19:00 through until after http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunrise|sunrise]].

The more enthusiastic SUCS members regularly set themselves interesting programming
and system development projects, both personal and group projects with other members. Examples of personal projects are personal websites, utility programs and scripts to help with SUCS administration, instant messaging software and ipod interface software development and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PIC_microcontroller|PIC microcontroller]] programming.
Deleted line 0:
!About SUCS
Added lines 1-40:
!About SUCS
%rframe% Path:/archive/2006/sucslogo.png | [-The SUCS Logo-]
'''Swansea University Computer Society''', known as '''SUCS''', is a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Student_society|student society]] at the [[http://www.swan.ac.uk/|University of Wales, Swansea]]. It offers [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computing|computing facilities]] and social events to its members and other Swansea University societies.

As of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005|2005]], SUCS had in excess of 180 members, making it one of the largest societies in the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University|University]]. Its membership comprises [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Students|students]], postgraduates, and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alumni|alumni]] who have earned life membership from the society. A number of other Swansea University societies are also members of SUCS and take advantage of the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer|computer]] facilities and 24 hour access that the society provides.

!!History
The first documented executive [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Committee|committee]] of the society were Andy Parkman, Alex Williams and Robin O'Leary in [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1988|1988]]. At this point in time the society was a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_science|computer science]] society. In the early [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1990s|1990s]] the university computer centre donated the society an old [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NCR_Corporation|NCR TOWER 16/32]] system. This was used to provide a variety of services including a bulletin board as well as to teach students system administration skills. At the time the university had large centralised computer systems so the computer science department had no way to teach such skills. Over time the membership became less computer science focused and the society became the computer society, and then to fit student union rules at the time the Swansea University Computer Society. Since then it has gone from strength to strength, gaining its own computer room in the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Students%27_Union|Students' Union]] building and establishing its own small [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_network|network]] of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Server_%28computing%29|servers]] and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Workstations|workstations]].

[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Cox|Alan Cox]] used one of the SUCS computers to help reproduce major problems in the early [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux|Linux]] [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TCP/IP|TCP/IP]] stack. Due to the SUCS machine being on a bridged university network making extensive use of other [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communications_protocol|protocols]], it was seeing more unusual traffic patterns in a couple of hours that other Linux developers would see in a week. [[http://groups.google.com/group/comp.os.linux.misc/msg/6550504c2e149d35|#]]

Up until the 2.4.19 kernel SUCS was also name-checked in the Linux TCP/IP stack:

%define=box block bgcolor=#ffffff padding=1em border="1px dashed #e76808"%

%box% [@
Linux NET4.0 for Linux 2.4
Based upon Swansea University Computer Society NET3.039
@]

!!Constitution
The (non-technical) [[http://sucs.org/About/Staff|executive committee]] is made up of an annually elected president, a treasurer, a secretary and, as of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000|2000]], a publicity officer. Additionally, an [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_administrator|admin]] team made up of some of the most competent and experienced SUCS members exists to offer [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technical_support|technical support]] and administration of the SUCS network. Elections for new executive committees are held at the end of the calendar year.

!!The SUCS Room
In 1999, The Students' Union allowed SUCS to set up a room of workstations for its members. This was originally on the third floor of the Student Union building in what used to be a debating room. Since this room is inside the building, it is only accessible during the hours the whole building is open.

In the summer of 1999 the society was moved to a much smaller room on the ground floor. Despite the small size of the new room, this was generally considered to be a Good Thing since the room now had its own external door. SUCS fitted a magnetic stripe card reader and electronic lock to the door which enabled 24/7 access to the room by the members. The door was connected to an old PC through an interface designed by Justin Mitchell (A.K.A. Arthur) and controlled through software written by Justin Mitchell and Steve Hill (A.K.A. FireFury). The software was originally intended to be a stop-gap measure until something nicer looking could be written, but it stayed in service until the summer of 2005 when the card reader finally gave up. Replacement hardware was ordered and new software written by Dave Arter (A.K.A. davea).

!!Computer Systems
SUCS has a network of around ten desktop computers which are available around the clock for use by its members. These run the Red Hat-sponsored Linux distribution, Fedora Core, except for the gateway connecting it to the University network, which runs Debian GNU/Linux. Members can also access their files remotely and connect their own laptops to the network in the society's computer room. Among the services provided by the society are web space, spam filtered email, free laser printing, a growing library of computer related books, mailing lists and a programming advisory service.

!!Community
As well as meeting each other in the SUCS computer room (known colloquially as "the room"), members also log into the society's bulletin board and talker called Milliways III (named after the restaurant in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy). Non-members are also welcome on Milliways and a number of non-members and ex-members can often be found there. The community on Milliways III is usually quite jovial and the combination of younger members (who bring new technologies and viewpoints to the group) and older, more experienced graduates, can be very technically helpful.

Traditionally, at the end of the academic year, SUCS holds a beach party on Swansea beach. The party attracts many of the ex-members and life members as well as the current members and serves well as a reunion for those who have left the Swansea area. The party usually involves a barbecue, bonfire and beer and usually runs from around 19:00 through until after sunrise.

The more enthusiastic SUCS members regularly set themselves interesting programming and system development projects, both personal and group projects with other members. Examples of personal projects are personal websites, utility programs and scripts to help with SUCS administration, instant messaging software and ipod interface software development and PIC microcontroller programming.

!!External Link
* [[http://sucs.org|Swansea University Computer Society website]]
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