Electrical Engineering 380: Computer Systems Laboratory Colloquium (2006-2007) - 19 Lectures Available
Stanford University + Follow
Course Description
EE 380: Computer Systems Laboratory Colloquium is a Stanford University course that features weekly speakers on current research and developments in computer systems. Topics touch upon all aspects of computer science and engineering including logic design, computer organization and architecture, software engineering, computer applications, public policy, and the social, business, and financial implications of technology. Frequently the Colloquium provides the first public forum for discussion of new products, discoveries, or ideas. This playlist consists of seminar speakers recorded during the 2006-2007 academic year.
Lectures
-
1. Future Evolution of High-Performance Microprocessors
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University -
2. Measurements vs. Bits: Compressed Sensors and Info Theory
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University -
3. A Structured Orchestration Language
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University -
4. Stream Computing
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University -
5. The Need, Evolution, and Detail of WLAN Security
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University -
6. 25 Years at PDI
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University -
7. Computing on the GPU
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University -
8. Flash Player ActionScript Virtual Machine
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University -
9. The United Communication Transformation
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University -
10. What the Second Generation Holds
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University -
11. Expanding the Mobile Consumer Software Market
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University -
12. Computer Architecture is Back: Parallel Computing Landscape
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University -
13. Design for Yield / Design for Manufacturing
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University -
14. Building Your Own Dynamic Language
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University -
15. A Fast Wait-Free Hash Table
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University -
16. An Ultrafast Optical Digital Technology Smart Light
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University -
17. VoIP Encryption in a Surveillance Society
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University -
18. A New Balancing Method for Solving Parametric Max Flow
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University -
19. Nanomanufacturing Technologies
Stanford
Computer Science
Stanford University

Discussion