Final Projects
CS267, Spring 2000

The final project should be something interesting both to you and to others. It can be a portion of a larger project or just a nifty idea you feel like exploring. Since these projects should be non-trivial, we advise working in groups of three or four.

Poster session: 18 May, 2000

There will be a poster session on the sixth floor of Soda near the end of the semester. The current date is 18 May, from 1-3pm. This is your chance to dazzle everyone who visits, especially the instructors. We'll walk around and ask your group for details on your project. Consider this an oral final, but one where you get to guide the questions. The two hour timespan is an upper-bound.

Report: 19 May, 2000

You'll also need to turn in a project paper at the end of the semester. The paper should be of journal quality. In fact, we encourage work that can be turned into a submitted paper.

Projects

David Bindel and Patrick Eaton
Candy 2K; SUGAR coating the Millennium Cluster
Dan Bonachea, Jarrod Chapman, and Nik Putnam
MOOSE (MIcroarray Optimal Oligo Selection Engine)
Steve Chien
Automated Optimization of an SVD Kernel
Yunfei Deng
Parallel Computation on FDTD Electromagnetic Simulation
Dan Horner
Parallel Scattering Calculations Using FEM-DVR
Ping Jiang and François Labelle
Energy Transfer Simulation of a Micro Bubble Heat Pump with Parallelized DSMC
William Kramer and Ravi Subramanian
Benchmarking in a Mixed Programming Mode
Michael H. Scott
Heuristic Scheme for Load Balancing of Force Based Beam-Column Finite Element Analysis

Ideas

Spare ideas and previous projects have been moved elsewhere.


Main CS267 page, and the TA's page

E. Jason Riedy
ejr@cs.berkeley.edu