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This is not a complete list, just whatever I can think of for now....

  1. You should have gotten an MIT ID number in an email at some point during the summer.
  2. Setup MIT Kerberos username and password: this is going to be your email account and Athena (MIT's computer lab system) account. For instance, my Kerberos username is "lululi," which means that my email is lululi@mit.edu and that I use the username lululi to log into Athena cluster (both on a physical machine and remotely). You only get to choose your username once, and MIT does not allow aliasing names the last time I look up, so I'd recommend choose something sane.
  3. Get MIT Certificate Authority and Personal Certificate set up so you can access MIT-restricted pages without having to type in your Kerberos username and password everytime. The link is here and it should take less than 5 mins to setup: https://ist-mit-edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org/certificates
  4. Setup MIT email forwarding (optional): https://ist-mit-edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org/email/forward MIT uses Outlook Web which is something any sane human being would not want to deal with (plus it has a super small storage limit), so I'd recommend forward your mit emails into another mailbox (a popular choice is gmail). It should takes less than five minutes to setup.
  5. Ship your items to MIT (optional): at least two self-storage services offers ship & store service, which means that you can ship boxes to their location, and they will hold them for you for up to a month till you arrive on campus and pick them up. The two I know of are:

These services could cost a couple hundred dollars though depend on how much stuff you've got, so the cheaper alternative would be finding out whether you can directly ship to your dorm, or ask a current graduate student politely whether you can ship to their apartment.

 

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