OIT Offers LastPass Password Manager
Have trouble keeping track of all of your passwords? OIT is now offering a solution to UA students, faculty and staff – LastPass password management tool.
Have trouble keeping track of all of your passwords? OIT is now offering a solution to UA students, faculty and staff – LastPass password management tool.
The Hugh F. Culverhouse Jr. School of Law at The University of Alabama is planning a symposium to honor the life and legacy of Judge Frank M. Johnson Jr.
For the first time in the history of the Southeastern Conference, all 14-member universities have been designated as doctoral universities with the highest level of research activity by the Carnegie Commission on Higher Education.
The University of Alabama is gearing up to celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day like never before.
This week at The University of Alabama: Human-Computer Interaction Research Gets Boost –Professor leads innovative effort to strengthen digital dynamics of dance – New initiative includes service opportunity on MLK Day – Gospel singer, journalist highlight ‘Realizing the Dream’
For years, the University has celebrated King’s legacy through the Realizing the Dream concert and community events, but now it’s expanding the celebration with the addition of more learning and engagement opportunities on the campus.
Susan Packard, a visionary media executive best known as a co-founder of Scripps Networks Interactive and former chief operating officer of HGTV, will offer her view on the media landscape and her role as a female executive within the industry in a lecture open to all University of Alabama students Monday, Jan. 14 at 10 a.m.
Mary Ellen Sinnott’s time at The University of Alabama has been filled with more opportunities than she could have imagined.
The Culverhouse College of Business is celebrating 100 years of transforming business in 2019. The upcoming centennial will feature several special initiatives aimed at helping College alumni and friends relive the rich history of Culverhouse while showcasing its plans for the future.
A University of Alabama computer science professor has received a grant to better understand how K-12 students in the Alabama Black Belt perceive human-computer interaction.