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Course Criteria
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1.00 Credits
The abstract windowing toolkit, focusing on containers, components, layout manager, event management, and the Delegation-based listener model for AWT and Java Beans programming. 1. 000 Credit Hours 1. 000 Lecture hours Levels: Graduate Doctoral, Graduate Business, Graduate, Undergraduate Schedule Types: Accelerated Course College of Science & Letters College Computer Science Department
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2.00 Credits
This course teaches Object Oriented design patterns in the Java programming languages. Examples are drawn from the Java class library. Java syntax and semantics are taught briefly by comparison to C and C++. 2. 000 Credit Hours 2. 000 Lecture hours Levels: Graduate Doctoral, Graduate Business, Graduate, Undergraduate Schedule Types: Accelerated Course College of Science & Letters College Computer Science Department
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2.00 Credits
This course presents the state-of-the-art of computer-aided software engineering technologies. CASE encompasses a collection of automated tools and methods that provide automated support to the software specification, design, development, testing, maintenance, and management of large and complex software systems. Students will develop working understanding of CASE methodologies and tools. 2. 000 Credit Hours 2. 000 Lecture hours Levels: Graduate Doctoral, Graduate, Undergraduate Schedule Types: Accelerated Course College of Science & Letters College Computer Science Department
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2.00 Credits
This course will examine both the state-of-the-art and the state-of-practice in automated software testing on a system level and an unit level. Relevant issues include theoretical foundations of automated testing, automation tools and techniques, empirical studies and industrial experience. Key topics include, but are not limited to: Fundamentals of automated software testing, automated test design, modeling and generation, automated test execution, automated test management, automated test metrics, automated tools, automated feature and regression testing Environments to support cost-effective automated software testing, discussions on the barriers to industrial use of automated testing. 2. 000 Credit Hours 2. 000 Lecture hours Levels: Graduate Doctoral, Graduate Business, Graduate Schedule Types: Accelerated Course College of Science & Letters College Computer Science Department
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3.00 Credits
Through hands-on experience in developing a client-server database project and developing and managing a client-server Internet project, this course teaches advanced skills for effective design and implementation of client-server applications. Students will examine the architectural and functionality decisions, technologies, configurations, languages, and techniques associated with client-server systems. Active/passive client-server technologies, as well as public, enterprise-wide, and inter-enterprise approaches to decision and operation support are discussed and implemented. 3. 000 Credit Hours 3. 000 Lecture hours Levels: Graduate Doctoral, Graduate Business, Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Science & Letters College Computer Science Department
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3.00 Credits
This course focuses on the technologies and protocols used by Internet WAN's and LAN's. The fundamental architecture, organization, and routing principles of the Internet are described. Part of the course will focus on emerging Internet technologies. 3. 000 Credit Hours 3. 000 Lecture hours Levels: Graduate Doctoral, Graduate Business, Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Science & Letters College Computer Science Department
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3.00 Credits
This course examines the principles for network design. The design process is studied from requirements gathering to deployment. The student will gain experience in estimating application load, network sizing, component choice, and protocol choice. Internetworking between popular components and protocols will be studied. Analytical and simulation techniques are described and used to design several local- and wide-area networks. 3. 000 Credit Hours 3. 000 Lecture hours Levels: Graduate Doctoral, Graduate Business, Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Science & Letters College Computer Science Department
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3.00 Credits
This course covers the architectures, protocols, and design issues for multimedia networks. Topics covered include coding, compression, streaming, synchronization, QoS, and adaptation. Current tools for multimedia networking will be surveyed. Issues with multimedia application development will be explored. Students will design and develop multimedia applications. 3. 000 Credit Hours 3. 000 Lecture hours Levels: Graduate Doctoral, Graduate Business, Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Science & Letters College Computer Science Department
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3.00 Credits
This course will present an in-depth examination of topics in data and network security such as: Access control, authentication, security assessment, network and data security tools, and security policies. A significant hands-on component includes network incidents to detect and fix. 3. 000 Credit Hours 3. 000 Lecture hours Levels: Graduate Doctoral, Graduate Business, Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Science & Letters College Computer Science Department
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3.00 Credits
This course will present the foundation of wireless technologies and examine state-of-the-art wireless systems, services, network technologies, and security. 3. 000 Credit Hours 3. 000 Lecture hours Levels: Graduate Doctoral, Graduate Business, Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Science & Letters College Computer Science Department
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