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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
3 FS CSCI 311, ENGL 130 (or its equivalent) with a grade of C- or higher. Special problems in the development of large software systems. Software life cycle, requirements analysis, structural design, implementation, costing, standards, verification, and validation. A group project is required.
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3.00 Credits
3 FS CSCI 311, CSCI 320. Operating system fundamentals, including history, process and thread management, concurrency with semaphores and monitors, deadlocks, storage management, file systems, I/O, and distributed systems.
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3.00 Credits
3 FA This is an intermediate level UNIX class. During the first part of the course, UNIX users will learn to use (or brush up on their facility with) power utilities such as sed, grep, awk, find, cut, paste, and join as preparation for creating shell scripts. Shell programming in the latter part of the course will focus primarily on the Bourne shell; however, some of the special features of C-shell and Korn shell scripts will be covered.
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3.00 Credits
3 FS CSCI 111. This course is an introduction to basic knowledge of networking technologies and network management concepts, including major network operating systems, communication protocols, and the supporting network hardware and software. The course emphasizes the hand-on experience of network management in a laboratory environment.
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3.00 Credits
3 INQ CSCI 112 or EECE 135; MATH 220. Scientific programming methods, solution of simultaneous linear and non-linear equations, iterative techniques, matrix methods, error analysis, development of specific and general algorithms.
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3.00 Credits
3 FS Junior standing, faculty permission. An examination of the emergence of artificial mind in machines, with special attention to related issues in the philosophy of mind and cognitive science.
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3.00 Credits
3 SP This course presents a practically based treatment of artificial intelligence, and a general introduction of technical issues associated with the development of intelligent systems. The course addresses issues of knowledge representation and natural language processing in particular, from a computational perspective. Students write programs to perform simple analyses of natural language and logical reasoning. Students also explore the limits of computation, using practical and theoretical approaches.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
1 FS CSCI 311, faculty permission. This internship is offered for 1.0-3.0 units. Students must register directly with a supervising faculty member.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
1 FS Faculty permission. This course is a special topic offered for 1.0-3.0 units. You must register directly with a supervising faculty member. Special problems in computer science. Limited to a maximum of 4 units during degree program.
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3.00 Credits
3 SP CSCI 344 or permission of instructor. This course guides students through the fundamental responsibilities of UNIX system administration. Topics include file system monitoring, file and directory archiving, user account management, shutdown and rebooting sequences, system backups, system log responsibilities, and basic system security. Projects focus on the creation of shell scripts to automate system administration tasks.
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