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  • 0.00 - 3.00 Credits

    Lecture 3 hours; recitation 1 hour; 3 credits. Prerequisites: A grade of C or better in CS 300 and 350. Laboratory work required. Provides students with challenges of business environments in developing a technology based project. Students identify a societal problem, identify solutions, define project solutions, develop project objectives, conduct feasibility analysis, establish organizational group structure to meet project objectives and develop formal specifications. Students make formal technical project presentations and develop web documentation. Students prepare a draft grant proposal.
  • 0.00 - 3.00 Credits

    Lecture 3 hours; 3 credits. Prerequisite: A grade of C or better in CS 330 and 410. Laboratory work required. Students write professional and non-technical documents and continue the development of the project defined in CS 410. Written work is reviewed and returned for corrective rewriting. Students will design and develop a project prototype, and demonstrate the prototype to a formal panel along with delivering the formal product specifications and a draft formal grant proposal. (qualifies as a CAP experience)
  • 3.00 Credits

    Lecture 3 hours; 3 credits. Prerequisites: MATH 316 and a grade of C or better in CS 250. Laboratory work required. Algorithms and software for fundamental problems in scientific computing. Topics: properties of floating point arithmetic, linear systems of equations, matrix factorizations, stability of algorithms, conditioning of problems, least-squares problems, eigenvalue computations, numerical integration and differentiation, nonlinerar equations, iterative solution of linear systems.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Lecture 3 hours; 3 credits. Prerequisites: A grade of C or better in CS 312 and 330. Laboratory work required. Overview of Internet and World Wide Web; web servers and security, HTTP protocol; web application and design; server side scripts and database integration, and programming for the Web.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Lecture 3 hours; 3 credits. Prerequisites: A grade of C or better in CS 312 and 450. Laboratory work required. Database applications of the Internet. Explore database management systems suitable for implementing database applications over the Web. Database issues: design, human computer interface (HCI) techniques, WWW user survey results, and Web-site evaluation criteria for designing web database applications. Dynamic web page creation, and Semantic Web. Using database tools on the Internet such as Oracle Developer Forms.
  • 0.00 - 6.00 Credits

    No course description available.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Lecture 3 hours; 3 credits. Prerequisites: A grade of C or better in CS 381 and either CS 330 or 361. Laboratory work required. Database Architecture. The relational model and relational algebra. SQL and PL/SQL. Entity Relationship Modeling. Functional dependencies and normalization. Network databases. Transactions, concurrency and recovery.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Lecture 3 hours; 3 credits. Prerequisite: A grade of C or better in CS 330 or 361. Laboratory work required. Evaluation of software development methodologies. Topics include: software life cycle models, software specification and design methodologies, informal specification techniques, formal specifications, design tools, software analysis, quality assurance, life cycle management, software costing models and complexity.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Lecture 3 hours; 3 credits. Prerequisite: A grade of C or better in CS 450/550. Laboratory work required. Investigate advanced methodologies for the design and development of software in database environments. Focus on component-based architectures and/or object-oriented paradigms. Applying elements of these methodologies to modern database application environments, such as data marts, data warehousing, and data mining. Projects include constructing multi-tier application software applying these methodologies using a state-of-the-art database platform.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Lecture 3 hours; 3 credits. Prerequisite: A grade of C or better in CS 455. Laboratory work required. The administration of computer networks and their interaction with wide area networks: network topologies for local and wide area networks, common protocols and services, management of distributed file services, routing and configuration, security, monitoring and trouble-shooting.
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