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\foo{What is the SIPB?}

The {\bf Student Information Processing Board} (pronounced
`Sip\hspace*{-2pt}\'{}-b\=e', sometimes written as `$\Sigma\Pi{\rm
B}$') is a student organization that supports computing at MIT.  Our
members are volunteers who range from hard-core hackers to casual
users.  What we share is a desire to help other students and members
of the MIT community with their computing needs.

\foo{How can I contact the SIPB?}

The SIPB office is on the fifth floor of the Student Center, next to
the Athena cluster.  Our room number is {\bf W20-557}, and our phone
number is {\bf x3-7788}.  We're staffed completely by volunteers, many
of which are students.  This means that we're open almost any time of
the day, including 4 a.m.

\foo{What does the SIPB offer?}

The SIPB supports all sorts of neat stuff.  Our mandate to ``support
computing at MIT'' is fulfilled in many diverse ways, and if you have
a new idea, we'd like to hear it.  Typically, we answer questions over
the phone, on-line, and in person; provide certain resources (such as
documentation and access to unusual hardware) to the MIT community;
and support hardware and software that ``falls between the cracks'' of
the other support mechanisms at MIT.

In particular, we provide support for the Athena user environment,
make available additional software and hardware (such as a digital
scanner, various tape drives, and a Macintosh on MITnet).  We also
provide support for both Linux and NetBSD, working to help make it
possible for people to use `Athena' on their home computers.  We also
provide many services to MITnet and the Internet, including running a
news server (news.mit.edu), web server (http://www.mit.edu/), and an
Internet FAQ Archive ftp/mail server (rtfm.mit.edu).

\foo{Who can join the SIPB?}

Anyone who is interested in what we do can become a prospective member
of the SIPB. You don't have to know a lot about computers, and you
don't have to be a computer science major. You {\bf do} have to want
to learn and to help other users. Our meetings are held every Monday
night at 7:30 in our office (W20-557), and are open to the public.

If you're wondering what sort of ``help'' you'd be giving, just look
at the list of things we do.  If you can answer questions on the phone
or in person, or write documentation or programs, or are interested in
learning more about these things, then come by and hang out with us,
or take a look at our web page: http://www.mit.edu/sipb/

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