Restr 13280 A 1 F 1030-1120 SMI 304 LIN,LIH-YUAN Open 57/ 80 CR/NC LEADERSHIP SEMINAR WILL ONLY MEET FRIDAYS EE 400 seminar flyer 2015 CS majors can register, but there was a glitch when I first posted it, so please try again.
Restr 13280 A 1 F 1030-1120 SMI 304 LIN,LIH-YUAN Open 57/ 80 CR/NC LEADERSHIP SEMINAR WILL ONLY MEET FRIDAYS EE 400 seminar flyer 2015 CS majors can register, but there was a glitch when I first posted it, so please try again.
While CSE 312 is a new prereq to CSE 427, there will be an exception this winter that will allow students without CSE 312 to still register.
Although the course is full right now, I expect space to open up over the next few weeks.
Crystal
Prereq is the new 2 credit CSE 390c
EE 371 will replace CSE 352 for CE majors: This is a pilot program that, if successful, we will continue to broaden next year. Taking 371 will open up several EE courses to CSE Students.
New Course Offering – Winter Quarter 2015
No: EE 371
Title: DESIGN OF DIGITAL CIRCUITS AND SYSTEMS
Credits: 5
Instructor: James K. Peckol
The execution of modern digital electronic systems designs presents challenges that demand new ways of thinking about such problems. Building upon the fundamental concepts of electronic circuits and those developed in EE 271 (or CSE 390c), the main objective of EE 371 is to provide students with a theoretical background to and practical experience with the tools, techniques, and methods for solving challenges related to signal integrity, the modeling complex systems using the Verilog hardware design language, managing power consumption in digital systems, and ensuring robust intra and inter system communication.
We will work with the Altera DE1-SOC development board that utilizes the Cyclone V FPGA combined with a variety of peripheral devices, potentially including the embedded NIOS processor, as a target hardware platform. The hardware side of the applications will be specified then designed, modeled, and tested using the Verilog HDL and the libraries and tools provided under the Quartus II development environment. We will synthesize then download the tested modules onto the DE1-SOC board where they will be integrated into a complete working system.
Upon completion of the class the student will have developed strong design skills for implementing complex digital logic systems in modern design languages onto FPGAs and similar programmable fabrics.
For this first offering, we’re going to have to prioritize juniors initially, particularly those headed for EE 476-EE 477 next year.
Just a reminder about this course: CSE 490N: Neural Engineering
It’s a 1-credit seminar that meets Tuesdays at 1:30. In a nutshell, alums visit to talk to you about the things they learned on the job that they wish they’d known before they got there.
More information is on last year’s web page – a description of the goals of the seminar, and a list of visitors.
The principal requirements are to SHOW UP, and PARTICIPATE via questioning the visitors.
If anyone is planning on taking stat 391 this spring, please note that it will have CSE 312 as a prerequisite starting this year.
-CSE Advising
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9:25 AM (5 hours ago)
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All future announcements this quarter for the Change Seminar will go out over our mailing list. If you are interested consider join the list and registaring for the course (CSE 590 C1, SLN: 12925).
What: Neha Kumar: Of Projectors, Mobiles, and Maternal Health
When: Tuesday, September 30 at 12pm
Where: The Allen Center, CSE 203
Abstract:
Neha is a postdoctoral researcher at UW CSE, where her research focuses on the design, production, and dissemination of visual media to address maternal and infant mortality in rural India. She recently completed her Ph.D. from the School of Information at UC Berkeley, where she conducted an ethnography of the adoption and self-guided uses of new media technologies of Indian youth from socioeconomically disadvantaged backgrounds. Her research objective is to contribute a deeper, more grounded understanding of emerging uses and users to the field of ICTD and its interventions.
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http://dub.washington.edu/
Hey folks, welcome back to UW!
Overloading: If you are still trying to get into a CSE course, plan to attend the first day and put your name on the overload list. We’ll try to make decisions by Monday.
Dropin advising: It’s going to be very busy this week. If you have immediate registration issues, feel free to come to dropins this week, if you want to look at your four year plan… let’s wait until you fill out a MyPlan and then come see us after a couple of weeks have passed…
Graduation Apps: We will email in a couple of weeks about graduation appointments. Everyone planning to graduate this quarter or winter or spring, will need to come see an advisor. We’ll have online appointments to sign up for when it’s time to complete this process. The first week isn’t a good time for that meeting, we might miss something, and that would make you sad.
Email: We get a lot of email, but here is a tip, if you need a section change or something registration related and you give us ALL the info you think we might need (student number, sln’s etc) so we don’t have to look things up, there is a higher chance we’ll answer your email sooner rather than later. Please try to give us at least 48 hours to return your email before pinging us again. Sending an email every hour or two doesn’t increase your chances of getting spot in the coveted class…
Tutoring: We do have some limited tutoring available, sign up online if you are interested. These small groups of 1-4 are led by a graduate student tutor. http://www.cs.washington.edu/students/ugrad/tutoring
390C: Reminder, still space in the 2 credit 390C course. Search for 390c on the blog for more details.
Welcome Night: We did have enough mentors sign up, so if you signed up, please plan to join us a week from today. Than you everyone, our students are awesome!
Hope you all had a relaxing summer break and are ready to dive into a fun quarter. We look forward to working with you.
Sincerely,
CSE Advising: Crystal, Raven, Jen, and Tina
Dear CS majors,
With just one week left until the beginning of a new academic year, we
would like to send you a quick reminder (or announcement) for the Putnam
Mathematical Contest preparations sessions and the Math 380A class (“The
Art of Problem Solving”) connected to it.
Math 380A can be used as good preparation for anyone interested in
mathematical contest-taking (and as a stand-alone, it would make for a
very interesting, fun, and challenging class).
Are you a person who is intrigued by mathematical puzzles and beautiful
problems? Would you considering taking the Putnam exam? If so, we urge you
to think about registering for Math 380A. Let me emphasize registering,
not just auditing. It is important that you do the homework, in order to
learn, and there is more incentive for doing homework if you’re
registered.
Please check out
www.math.washington.edu/~
for the Putnam exam, and
http://www.math.washington.edu/~putnam/m380_aut14.html
for Math 380A, The Art of Problem Solving.
Wishing you all a great Autumn ’14 quarter,
Ioana Dumitriu and Julia Pevtsova