CS451/651 - Spring 2020

CS651 Project

Proposals due: Mar 6 11:59pm
Code and write-up due: Apr 17 11:59pm
Presentations: TBA

Introduction

You have the choice of doing either the 4th assignment or a final project. You will choose your own idea for a final project for this class.

You must get our approval for your idea in advance. You must form a group of 3 or 4 CS651 students to collaborate on the project. You'll turn in your code and a short write-up describing the design and implementation of your project, and make a short in-class presentation about your work. We will post your write-up and code on the web site after the end of the semester, unless you explicitly talk to us about why you want to keep yours confidential.

Your project should be something interesting and challenging that's closely related to CS651 core topics, such as fault tolerance. Below you'll find some half-baked ideas that we think could turn into interesting projects, but we haven't given them too much thought.

Deliverables

There are four concrete steps to the final project, as follows:

  1. Form a group and decide on the project you would like to work on. Feel free to use Piazza to find group members and discuss ideas. Course staff will be happy to discuss project ideas via e-mail or in person.
  2. Flesh out the exact problem you will be addressing and how you will go about solving it. By the proposal deadline, you must submit a proposal (less than a page) describing: your group members list, the problem you want to address, how you plan to address it, and what are you proposing to specifically design and implement. Submit your proposal using gsubmit and email a copy to the TF. We'll tell you whether we approve, or not, and give you feedback.
  3. Execute your project: design and build something neat!
  4. Write a document describing the design and implementation of your project, and turn it in along with your project's code by the final deadline. The document should be about 3 pages of text that helps us understand what problem you solved, and what your code does. The code and writeups will be posted online after the end of the semester.
  5. Prepare a short, 10-15 minute, presentation about the work that you have done for your final project. You will present you work to the instructor and tf during the study period and exam week.

Half-baked project ideas

Here's a list of ideas to get you started thinking -- but you should feel free to propose your own ideas.