CS 337
Syllabus
Winter 2000

The Instructor
The analog version of Jeff Ondich can often be found in CMC 327. His office phone number is 646-4364, and his home number is 663-7123. His office hours for the winter term of 2000 are Monday 2A, Tuesday 11:00-12:00, Wednesday 5A, and Friday 2A, but he's around and available a lot of other times.
The textbook
The textbook for this class is Computer Networks, 3rd edition, by Andrew S. Tanenbaum, Prentice Hall, 1996.
Ethics
It's important to experiment with the Internet if you wish to understand how it functions. I expect your experimentation to be done with respect for the privacy and property rights of other people and institutions. Don't wander into ethical gray areas.

If you have an experiment you want to try, but you think it could be viewed as a security risk, talk to Mike Tie and me first. In general, you're safest restricting your experiments to the Math/CS computers.

We'll be reading and discussing the ACM Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct to get a little more idea of what the computing profession thinks is meant by ethical conduct.

Your Grade
Your grade in the course will be determined by your performance on two exams (25% each), a final project (20%), and homework (30%). It is also likely that we will have a guest speaker during the term, in which case I will multiply your cumulative score by the number of guest speakers' talks you have attended. Homework will include book exercises, some client/server programming, and protocol implementations using the cnet system. For your final project, you will research a special topic and present your findings in the form of a Web page. During the final exam period, we will have a public poster session, where the "posters" are on-line.



Jeff Ondich, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, Carleton College, Northfield, MN 55057, (507) 646-4364, jondich@carleton.edu