CSE 634 Wireless LAN-based Systems and Applications (Fall 2002)
Course Description
This is an advanced systems software course
with an emphasis on wireless LAN-based systems and applications.
Unlike other special topic course, this course will be centered
around the construction of several novel wireless LAN-based
systems and applications.
Students who plan to
take this course are expected to have the level of maturity in computer
networking as covered in CSE533, the network programming course, or
the first six chapters of the second edition
of Andrew Tanenbaum's "Computer Networks" book, as well as
UNIX socket programming.
Because the course will be heavily oriented towards
classroom discussion, student presentation, and class projects,
passive auditors are not welcome.
We will meet three hours per week, and in each meeting there will be
a 1.5-hour lecture and a 1.5-hour paper presentation and design review
by the students.
The workload of this course consists of three common miniprojects
and a final class project.
Students are organized into teams of two to three persons to
design and implement
a wireless LAN-based system and application. Each team is required to
make a 30-minute presentations for its project to the class
at the end of the semester.
In addition, every team needs to turn in a
publication-quality
research paper documenting the experiments, results, and analysis.
The grade will be based on: 35% Homework, 15% Presentation, and 50% Project.
The workload is estimated to be about 6 hours per week,
excluding the project effort.
The first class is on 9/6 (Friday).
Administrative Matters
- Location: Room 2212
- Time: 4-7 PM Friday
- Textbook: 802.11 Standard Specification and Wireless LAN papers
- Instructor: Professor Tzi-cker Chiueh
- Office: CS Building, Room 1419
- Phone: 516-632-8449
- mail: chiueh@cs.sunysb.edu
- Office Hours: 2:50-3:50 PM Tues/Thur;5:15-6:30PM Thursday
- Course Homepage: http://www.ecsl.cs.sunysb.edu/~chiueh/cse634
Special Needs
If you have a physical, psychological, medical or learning disability that may impact on your ability to carry out assigned course
work, I would urge that you contact the staff in the Disabled Student Services office (DSS), Room 133 Humanities,
632-6748/TDD. DSS will review your concerns and determine, with you, what accommodations are necessary and
appropriate. All information and documentation of disability is confidential.
Handouts
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