AIRWiki

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Revision as of 12:39, 17 April 2008 by GiulioFontana (Talk | contribs) (Welcome to AIRWiki!)

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Welcome to AIRWiki!

AIRWiki is AIRLab's wiki, a tool for teachers, researchers and students which allows to share information about projects in an easy and quick way.

How do I access the contents of this wiki?

If you want to read the public pages of the AIRWiki, such as this one... be our guest! The AIRWiki, as implicit in the concept of wiki, is a work in progress. Its public pages, however, are (relatively) stable: they describe the AIRLab and the projects we work on.

On the other hand, private pages of the AIRWiki contain the notes of the people who are presently working on those projects. Those notes, when ready, will eventually end up in public pages, but access to them is restricted to registered users.

Registered users are the people who work in the AIRLab, i.e. teachers, researchers and students. They can access both public and private pages, and modify the private pages (students) or both public and private pages (teachers and researchers). To discover how to register, see the Bureaucracy section.

How can I contribute?

If you have information you want to share (description of what you do, links to useful sources of information, HOWTOs about lab tools, and so on) just publish them on the AIRWiki: it's as easy as creating a new page!

Moreover, a wiki always needs help in terms of maintenance, linking between pages, shaping of a structure and so on. And well, in this very moment it also needs a logo ;-) If you want to help please send an email to either migliore (at) elet (dot) polimi (dot) it or eynard (at) elet (dot) polimi (dot) it.

Research areas

At the AIRLab we work on a very broad range of topics, organized in these areas:

Projects

Research work in the above areas is done within projects. Details about active and finished projects are available at the Projects page.

Structures

To work, you generally need a place and/or some hardware. The following links tells you...

AIRLab survival guide

Sometimes the most difficult problems are not what you expect...