Spring 1999
PROFESSOR
Mostafa Ammar Room 219 - GCATT Building Ext. 4-3292, e-mail: ammar@cc.gatech.edu Office Hrs: by appointmentTEACHING ASSISTANT
Aparna Pappu
Office Hours: MW 11-12 in CoC Commons Area.
PREREQUISITE
1- CS 4380, or CS 6380 or EE 6092 or some other introductory course in networking. 2- Knowledge of C and Unix 3- Knowledge of Sockets Programming ***Note that these are very important prerequisites. We will make no allowance for people without the appropriate pre-requisites.COURSE ORGANIZATION
Assignments 35% Class Participation 25% Term Paper 40%
Recommended Book P. Ferguson and G. Huston, "Quality of Service: Delivering QoS on teh Internet and in Corporate Networks" Wiley.
Assignments
There will be four assignments:
Note: Auditing this class is discouraged. Students auditing the class are required to do the HW assignments and participate in the classroom discussion but will not be required to do the term paper.
All work in this class is to be done individually and independently, code and/or solution sharing is not allowed.
For CoC students the programming assignments can be done on any CoC Sun, for other students OIT-maintained Suns can be used or you can setup a temporary CoC account upon request. Please check with the course's TA for information on how to set up a CoC account.
Course Objective
This course deals primarily with the problems that arise when carrying multimedia traffic across networks. Since this is a relatively new area with a lot of on-going research, no text on the topic is available. We will be primarily reading a number of papers and handouts on the topic. The course will cover the following set of topics:
WWW Page and News Group
The course will have a web page where we will maintain
all the documentation (including this handout)
and source code.
You can access the web page at:
http://www.cc.gatech.edu/fac/Mostafa.Ammar/6385/
We will also maintain a news group (git.cc.classes.6385) We will read and respond to postings to this newsgroup regularly.
CS 6385 - Networking for Multimedia
Spring 1999
Term Paper Decription
(Note: This is a departure from how we were doing this class in the past.)
Each student (individually) will choose a paper related to multimedia issues. The student will then prepare a presentation on the paper to be given in front of the class and write a 3-page summary of the paper and its conclusions.
Choosing the paper: The paper must be related to multimedia networking and chosen from one of the following sources: IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, ACM Multimedia Systems Journal, IEEE INFOCOM Proceedings, ACM SIGCOMM Proceedings, ACM Multimedia conference proceedings, or Proceedings of IEEE ICNP, for the years 96,97,98 or 99 only. Papers choices must be approved by the instructor. Only one student may choose a particular paper and a FCFS order will be enforced on paper choices. You may not choose a paper co-authored by Ammar or a paper that you have co-authored. You also may not choose a paper that you have used or are using as the basis of a term project in another course. Paper choice is due no later than the Tuesday after drop date but for best flexibility make your choice as early as possible.
The Presentation: Each presentation will be at most 12 minutes. Students may use overhead projectors or laptops to present the paper. No blackboard presentations will be allowed. The timing will be strictly enforced. A 3-minute question period will follow each presentation. The order of presentations will be decided by a lottery. Students may exchange positions with others.
Class Participation: All students will be asked to grade each presentation in various dimensions and will be asked one or two simple questions regarding the paper being presented. Each student is required to hand in at least 25 presentation forms. The class participation grade will be determined in large part by the forms being handed in.
Paper Summary: You should hand in a 3-page summary of the paper you are presenting. The summary should be typewritten. It shoudl discuss ata minimum 1) the general problem area of the paper, 2) the specific problem being addressed in the paper, 3) the explicit contributions that the paper makes towards a solution to the problem and 4) your own opinion of the importance of the work described in the paper.
Important Dates