Steam-powered Turing Machine University of Washington Department of Computer Science & Engineering
 CSE454 Project Presentations
  CSE Home   About Us    Search    Contact Info 

Administrivia
 Home
 Using course email
 Email archive
 Policies
Content
 Overview
 Resources
 Lecture slides
Assignments
 Reading
 Project
   

Guidelines for last-class presentations:

  • Presentations will be Monday, December 13 2009, 10:30-12:30 p.m. in the classroom.
  • Length: 12 + 2 min for questions
    Be sure to practice presentation & gauge length
  • Powerpoint or PDF Slides (I suggest a max 8)
    I assume you will use own laptop to present slides; otherwise 1) let me know asap and 2) mail me slides (.ppt or .pdf) by 8:30am on the morning of the presentations.
    Bring slides on a backup device, eg USB memory.
  • Every member should talk for some part of the presentation slot
  • Subtopics to cover:
    • Aspirations & reality of what you built
    • Demo?
    • Suprises (What was harder or easier than expected?)
    • What did you learn?
    • Experiments & validation
    • Who did what



Schedule for Presentations

(Order picked at random from random.org's sequence generator)

10:30 - BestBet - Abdul Salama, Neha Gaur, Isamu Mar, Saptarshi Bhattacharya, Yamir Godil

10:45 - WikiTruthiness - Katherine Baker, David Koenig, Aaron Miller, Cullen Walsh

11:00 - TwitEvents - Sam Clark, Golf Sinteppadon, Curtis Yamanka, Jon McCord, Jesse Shepherd, Michael Amorozo

11:15 - Freshipes - Nicholas Brekhus, Panharith Thong, Min Sul

11:30 - One Click Books - Mark Jordan, Nicholas Castorina, Ken Inoue

11:45 - ProjectNomNom - Roy McElmurry, Aryan Naraghi, Josh Mottaz, Ryan Oman, Noe Khalfa

12:00 - Read.me - Sean Ren, Peter Scheibel, Kha Nguyen, Michael Mathews

12:15 - Developing Regions - YoonSung Hong, Ting Wang, Matthew Lauren


CSE logo Department of Computer Science & Engineering
University of Washington
Box 352350
Seattle, WA  98195-2350
(206) 543-1695 voice, (206) 543-2969 FAX