Enrollment may be limited.
If you feel you know enough about networking, an alternative subject to 6.829 is 6.824. 6.824 is a graduate equivalent of 6.829, but focusses on the engineering of computer systems. If you are a graduate student in systems or networking, we recommend that you take both classes during your graduate career at MIT. You should not take them both in the same term, though, since both have heavy-duty projects.
In addition, there will be a few problem sets assigned during the term. We expect to use the VINT network simulator, ns-2 for some of the problem set questions. In many cases, we expect ns-2 to be useful for your project too. We strongly encourage you to get familiar with ns-2 as soon as you can, by installing it on your machine and playing with it. While not comprehensive, the available documentation is quite good and adequate to start using it. Any questions about usage are best directed to ns-users@mash.cs.berkeley.edu (there are instructions on the ns-2 Web page on how you can subscribe to this list. Problem sets will constitute 20% of your grade.
We will have two in-class mid-term quizzes, currently planned for October 24 2001 and December 3 2001. These count for 30% of your final grade.
Finally, class participation counts for 5% of your grade.
In summary:
| Course project (paper + presentation) | 45% |
| Problem sets | 20% |
| Two quizzes | 30% |
| Class participation, general enthusiasm and energy-level! | 5% |
Remember, this is a graduate class and grades shouldn't be your primary or only motivator! What matters is how much you learn about research in networking and how much it excites you! We hope that this class and the project you work on meet that goal.
Last update: Sat Sep 1 23:39:42 EDT 2001 (hari)