 This video will teach you how to set up and take advantage of your academic pass for the New York Times, courtesy of the University Libraries homepage. New York Times passes are available for current faculty, staff and students. When you have activated a pass, you will have access to the New York Times online without needing your own subscription. While you have an active pass, you will be able to use the New York Times and apps from anywhere in the world without connecting through the University Libraries. To redeem a New York Times pass, navigate to the New York Times welcome page and log in. If you are claiming a pass for the first time, click Create Account. Enter your Virginia Tech email address, set a password and then click Create Account once more. If you are renewing an expired pass or if you already have a New York Times account with your VT email, you will click Already Have an Account, log in here, then you will enter your account information. If you have a current paid subscription, you can switch from a paid account using an at-vt.edu email. You must first deactivate your subscription which will free up that email address. To cancel an existing paid subscription, contact New York Times customer care at customercare at nytimes.com or 1-800-698-4637. Once your email address is available, select the link titled Already Have an Account, log in here, and then proceed in logging in with your at-vt.edu email address. The New York Times will confirm your account is activated on the next Start Your Access screen and will display your renewal date upon successful account creation or confirmation. You will also have the ability to set a calendar reminder on this page. Now that the registration process is complete, you will be able to access the New York Times online on any device anywhere in the world without having to connect through the library's website. Simply access www.nytimes.com and its features directly using the email and password that you just registered. With the academic pass and your activated account, you have access to more than just the daily news edition. For example, you have access to a full archive back to 1851 with an interactive digital replica of the print NYT through 2002. As well as Spanish and Chinese editions, plus hundreds of articles published in other languages. Immersive multimedia features are also included like 1619 and privacy projects. New York Times offers nytimes.com slash edu, which is an interdisciplinary resource designed to help faculty easily incorporate nytimes.com. Finally, the New York Times also offers their completely customizable NYT app. I hope this was a helpful tutorial and that your questions surrounding your New York Times academic pass were answered. Thanks for watching!