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CS 164: Computing with Physical Objects: Algorithms for Shape and Motion

Algorithms and data structures deadling with the representation and manipulation of physical objects and entities in the computer. Computational structures for shape and motion, shape fitting and matching, triangulations and other spatial subdivisions, and low-dimensional search and optimization. Examples relevant to computer graphics, computer vision, robotics and geometric computation emphasizing algorithmic paradigms applicable to multidimensional data. Prerequisites: CS 103 or 103B, and CS 109 or STATS 116, and CS 106B/X or consent of instructor.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3 | UG Reqs: GER:DB-EngrAppSci
Instructors: Guibas, L. (PI)

CS 170: Composition, Coding, and Performance with SLOrc (MUSIC 128)

Classroom instantiation of the Stanford Laptop Orchestra (SLOrk) which includes public performances. An ensemble of more than 20 humans, laptops, controllers, and special speaker arrays designed to provide each computer-mediated instrument with its sonic identity and presence. Topics and activities include issues of composing for laptop orchestras, instrument design, sound synthesis, programming, and live performance. May be repeated four times for credit.
Terms: Spr | Units: 1-5 | UG Reqs: WAY-CE | Repeatable 4 times (up to 20 units total)
Instructors: Wang, G. (PI)

CS 178: Digital Photography

Scientific, artistic, and computing aspects of digital photography. Topics: lenses and optics, light and sensors, optical effects in nature, perspective and depth of field, sampling and noise, the camera as a computing platform, image processing and editing, history of photography, computational photography. Counts as a CS elective in the Graphics track. Prerequisites: introductory calculus; students must have a digital camera with manual control over shutter speed and aperture. Loaner cameras may be available. No programming experience required. Enrollment limited; see cs178.stanford.edu for enrollment procedure.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3-5 | UG Reqs: WAY-CE, GER:DB-EngrAppSci
Instructors: Levoy, M. (PI)

CS 181: Computers, Ethics, and Public Policy

(Formerly 201.) Primarily for majors entering computer-related fields. Ethical and social issues related to the development and use of computer technology. Ethical theory, and social, political, and legal considerations. Scenarios in problem areas: privacy, reliability and risks of complex systems, and responsibility of professionals for applications and consequences of their work. Prerequisite: 106B or X.
Terms: Win | Units: 3-4 | UG Reqs: GER:EC-EthicReas, WAY-ER
Instructors: Johnson, M. (PI)

CS 191: Senior Project

Restricted to Computer Science and Computer Systems Engineering students. Group or individual projects under faculty direction. Register using instructor's section number. A project can be either a significant software application or publishable research. Software application projects include substantial programming and modern user-interface technologies and are comparable in scale to shareware programs or commercial applications. Research projects may result in a paper publishable in an academic journal or presentable at a conference. Required public presentation of final application or research results.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1-6 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: Aiken, A. (PI) ; Altman, R. (PI) ; Baker, M. (PI) ; Barbagli, F. (PI) ; Batzoglou, S. (PI) ; Bejerano, G. (PI) ; Boneh, D. (PI) ; Bradski, G. (PI) ; Brafman, R. (PI) ; Cain, J. (PI) ; Cao, P. (PI) ; Cheriton, D. (PI) ; Dally, B. (PI) ; De-Micheli, G. (PI) ; Dill, D. (PI) ; Dwork, C. (PI) ; Engler, D. (PI) ; Fedkiw, R. (PI) ; Feigenbaum, E. (PI) ; Fikes, R. (PI) ; Fisher, K. (PI) ; Fogg, B. (PI) ; Fox, A. (PI) ; Garcia-Molina, H. (PI) ; Genesereth, M. (PI) ; Gill, J. (PI) ; Girod, B. (PI) ; Goel, A. (PI) ; Golub, G. (PI) ; Guibas, L. (PI) ; Hanrahan, P. (PI) ; Heer, J. (PI) ; Hennessy, J. (PI) ; Horowitz, M. (PI) ; Johari, R. (PI) ; Johnson, M. (PI) ; Jurafsky, D. (PI) ; Katti, S. (PI) ; Kay, M. (PI) ; Khatib, O. (PI) ; Klemmer, S. (PI) ; Koller, D. (PI) ; Koltun, V. (PI) ; Konolige, K. (PI) ; Kozyrakis, C. (PI) ; Lam, M. (PI) ; Latombe, J. (PI) ; Leskovec, J. (PI) ; Levis, P. (PI) ; Levitt, M. (PI) ; Levoy, M. (PI) ; Li, F. (PI) ; Manna, Z. (PI) ; Manning, C. (PI) ; Mazieres, D. (PI) ; McCarthy, J. (PI) ; McCluskey, E. (PI) ; McKeown, N. (PI) ; Meng, T. (PI) ; Mitchell, J. (PI) ; Motwani, R. (PI) ; Musen, M. (PI) ; Nass, C. (PI) ; Nayak, P. (PI) ; Ng, A. (PI) ; Nilsson, N. (PI) ; Olukotun, O. (PI) ; Ousterhout, J. (PI) ; Parlante, N. (PI) ; Plotkin, S. (PI) ; Plummer, R. (PI) ; Prabhakar, B. (PI) ; Pratt, V. (PI) ; Raghavan, P. (PI) ; Rajaraman, A. (PI) ; Roberts, E. (PI) ; Rosenblum, M. (PI) ; Roughgarden, T. (PI) ; Sahami, M. (PI) ; Salisbury, J. (PI) ; Shoham, Y. (PI) ; Thrun, S. (PI) ; Tobagi, F. (PI) ; Trevisan, L. (PI) ; Ullman, J. (PI) ; Van Roy, B. (PI) ; Widom, J. (PI) ; Wiederhold, G. (PI) ; Winograd, T. (PI) ; Young, P. (PI) ; Zelenski, J. (PI)

CS 191W: Writing Intensive Senior Project

Terms: Aut, Win, Spr | Units: 3-6 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: Aiken, A. (PI) ; Altman, R. (PI) ; Baker, M. (PI) ; Barbagli, F. (PI) ; Batzoglou, S. (PI) ; Bejerano, G. (PI) ; Blikstein, P. (PI) ; Boneh, D. (PI) ; Bradski, G. (PI) ; Brafman, R. (PI) ; Cain, J. (PI) ; Cao, P. (PI) ; Cheriton, D. (PI) ; Dally, B. (PI) ; De-Micheli, G. (PI) ; Dill, D. (PI) ; Dwork, C. (PI) ; Engler, D. (PI) ; Fedkiw, R. (PI) ; Feigenbaum, E. (PI) ; Fikes, R. (PI) ; Fisher, K. (PI) ; Fogg, B. (PI) ; Fox, A. (PI) ; Garcia-Molina, H. (PI) ; Genesereth, M. (PI) ; Gill, J. (PI) ; Girod, B. (PI) ; Goel, A. (PI) ; Golub, G. (PI) ; Guibas, L. (PI) ; Hanrahan, P. (PI) ; Heer, J. (PI) ; Hennessy, J. (PI) ; Horowitz, M. (PI) ; Johari, R. (PI) ; Johnson, M. (PI) ; Jurafsky, D. (PI) ; Katti, S. (PI) ; Kay, M. (PI) ; Khatib, O. (PI) ; Klemmer, S. (PI) ; Koller, D. (PI) ; Koltun, V. (PI) ; Konolige, K. (PI) ; Kozyrakis, C. (PI) ; Lam, M. (PI) ; Latombe, J. (PI) ; Leskovec, J. (PI) ; Levis, P. (PI) ; Levitt, M. (PI) ; Levoy, M. (PI) ; Li, F. (PI) ; Manna, Z. (PI) ; Manning, C. (PI) ; Mazieres, D. (PI) ; McCarthy, J. (PI) ; McCluskey, E. (PI) ; McKeown, N. (PI) ; Meng, T. (PI) ; Mitchell, J. (PI) ; Motwani, R. (PI) ; Musen, M. (PI) ; Nass, C. (PI) ; Nayak, P. (PI) ; Ng, A. (PI) ; Nilsson, N. (PI) ; Olukotun, O. (PI) ; Ousterhout, J. (PI) ; Parlante, N. (PI) ; Plotkin, S. (PI) ; Plummer, R. (PI) ; Prabhakar, B. (PI) ; Pratt, V. (PI) ; Raghavan, P. (PI) ; Rajaraman, A. (PI) ; Roberts, E. (PI) ; Rosenblum, M. (PI) ; Roughgarden, T. (PI) ; Sahami, M. (PI) ; Salisbury, J. (PI) ; Shoham, Y. (PI) ; Thrun, S. (PI) ; Tobagi, F. (PI) ; Trevisan, L. (PI) ; Ullman, J. (PI) ; Van Roy, B. (PI) ; Wang, G. (PI) ; Widom, J. (PI) ; Wiederhold, G. (PI) ; Winograd, T. (PI) ; Young, P. (PI) ; Zelenski, J. (PI)

CS 192: Programming Service Project

Restricted to Computer Science students. Appropriate academic credit (without financial support) is given for volunteer computer programming work of public benefit and educational value.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1-4 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: Aiken, A. (PI) ; Altman, R. (PI) ; Baker, M. (PI) ; Barbagli, F. (PI) ; Batzoglou, S. (PI) ; Bejerano, G. (PI) ; Boneh, D. (PI) ; Bradski, G. (PI) ; Brafman, R. (PI) ; Cain, J. (PI) ; Cao, P. (PI) ; Cheriton, D. (PI) ; Dally, B. (PI) ; De-Micheli, G. (PI) ; Dill, D. (PI) ; Dwork, C. (PI) ; Engler, D. (PI) ; Fedkiw, R. (PI) ; Feigenbaum, E. (PI) ; Fikes, R. (PI) ; Fisher, K. (PI) ; Fogg, B. (PI) ; Fox, A. (PI) ; Garcia-Molina, H. (PI) ; Genesereth, M. (PI) ; Gill, J. (PI) ; Girod, B. (PI) ; Goel, A. (PI) ; Golub, G. (PI) ; Guibas, L. (PI) ; Hanrahan, P. (PI) ; Heer, J. (PI) ; Hennessy, J. (PI) ; Horowitz, M. (PI) ; Johari, R. (PI) ; Johnson, M. (PI) ; Jurafsky, D. (PI) ; Katti, S. (PI) ; Kay, M. (PI) ; Khatib, O. (PI) ; Klemmer, S. (PI) ; Koller, D. (PI) ; Koltun, V. (PI) ; Konolige, K. (PI) ; Kozyrakis, C. (PI) ; Lam, M. (PI) ; Latombe, J. (PI) ; Leskovec, J. (PI) ; Levis, P. (PI) ; Levitt, M. (PI) ; Levoy, M. (PI) ; Li, F. (PI) ; Manna, Z. (PI) ; Manning, C. (PI) ; Mazieres, D. (PI) ; McCarthy, J. (PI) ; McCluskey, E. (PI) ; McKeown, N. (PI) ; Meng, T. (PI) ; Mitchell, J. (PI) ; Motwani, R. (PI) ; Musen, M. (PI) ; Nass, C. (PI) ; Nayak, P. (PI) ; Ng, A. (PI) ; Nilsson, N. (PI) ; Olukotun, O. (PI) ; Ousterhout, J. (PI) ; Parlante, N. (PI) ; Plotkin, S. (PI) ; Plummer, R. (PI) ; Prabhakar, B. (PI) ; Pratt, V. (PI) ; Raghavan, P. (PI) ; Rajaraman, A. (PI) ; Roberts, E. (PI) ; Rosenblum, M. (PI) ; Roughgarden, T. (PI) ; Sahami, M. (PI) ; Salisbury, J. (PI) ; Shoham, Y. (PI) ; Thrun, S. (PI) ; Tobagi, F. (PI) ; Trevisan, L. (PI) ; Ullman, J. (PI) ; Van Roy, B. (PI) ; Widom, J. (PI) ; Wiederhold, G. (PI) ; Winograd, T. (PI) ; Young, P. (PI) ; Zelenski, J. (PI)

CS 193C: Client-Side Internet Technologies

Client-side technologies used to create web sites such as sophisticated Web 2.0 interfaces similar to Google maps. XHTML, CSS, JavaScript, document object model (DOM), AJAX, and Flash. Prerequisite: programming experience at the level of 106A.
Terms: Sum | Units: 3

CS 193G: Programming Massively Parallel Processors

Students will be taught how to effectively program massively parallel processors using the CUDA C programming language. Students will develop familiarity with the language itself, be exposed to the architecture of modern GPUs, and understand how to apply basic parallel patterns to decompose programs for parallel execution. The course is targeted at graduate students and upper-division undergraduates who have a good working experience of programming in C. Prior experience in parallel programming is not required. Open to all majors and graduate disciplines.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3

CS 193P: iPhone Application Programming

Tools and APIs required to build applications for the iPhone platform using the iPhone SDK. User interface designs for mobile devices and unique user interactions using multitouch technologies. Object-oriented design using model-view-controller pattern, memory management, Objective-C programming language. iPhone APIs and tools including Xcode, Interface Builder and Instruments on Mac OS X. Other topics include: core animation, bonjour networking, mobile device power management and performance considerations. Prerequisites: C language and programming experience at the level of 106B or X. Recommended: UNIX, object-oriented programming, graphical toolkits.
Terms: Win, Spr | Units: 3
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