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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
Offers elective credit for courses taken at consortium institutions.
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4.00 Credits
Offers a combination lecture seminar/computer lab course that introduces selected advanced topics in computer technology. Various digital circuits are analyzed via hand calculation analysis and computer simulation. Students discover the advantages and disadvantages of using computer simulation in solving digital electronic circuit problems and are exposed firsthand to the concept of team engineering design.
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4.00 Credits
Uses a customer specification/requirements for a computing device to bring the student through a complete analysis and hardware design. Introduces the notion of RISC vs. CISC architectural trade-offs and exposes the underlying structures of several popular CPUs. Describes and uses register transfer notation (RTN) to provide an assembly language explanation of a machine. Performance improvements using multiple data paths, pipelining, and cache memory techniques are also discussed.
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4.00 Credits
Introduces and justifies the need for communications networks. Describes the various standards and procedures currently available for transporting data over distance. Discusses rates, formats, modulation techniques, error detection/recovery, and standards. Also introduces the concept of local area networks (LANs) and their role in the data communications arena. The seven-layer ISO model is used as the basis for both major segments of the course. A variety of different protocols are discussed.
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4.00 Credits
Provides detailed information about LAN/WAN integration, Internetworking, the use of routed and switched networks, and a general overview of information transfer technology. Because networking changes occur frequently, this senior-level course covers new technologies as they occur. A project is assigned to student groups that requires an understanding of the topics and networking technologies.
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4.00 Credits
Examines the latest trends in the computer industry including both hardware and business-related issues. Covers details of leading companies, their products, and the techniques that were used to make them successful. Includes readings from multiple relevant sources that prepare graduating seniors for the issues and problems they will face in the industrial world.
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4.00 Credits
Provides an overview, justification, and implementation details of the rudiments of many operating systems. Describes process and resource management techniques, file systems, and memory system implementations. Shows many of the alternatives available and describes advantages and trade-offs of using each one. Uses several popular operating systems for resources and provides an exhaustive treatment of one of the current systems.
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4.00 Credits
Introduces UNIX operating system concepts, tools, and utilities. Topics include file organization, security techniques, operating system models, and a brief comparison of the different UNIX flavors. Develops a fundamental understanding and working knowledge of UNIX using system commands, file system concepts, text processing tools, electronic communication, processes, shell script programming, command procedures, pipes, I/O redirection, filters, system administration, and installation techniques.
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4.00 Credits
Studies the design and development of C and C++ application programs that interface and expand capabilities of the operating system kernel. Enables programmers to interact with the various UNIX and Windows operating system through a study of system calls and library routines. Topics include system programming tools, fundamental concepts, file creation and access, signals and signal handling, multitasking, file and terminal I/O, process creation and program execution, and forms of interprocess communication and synchronization (pipes, message queues, semaphores, and shared memory).
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4.00 Credits
Offers elective credit for courses taken at consortium institutions.
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