ECE 5740: Advanced Digital VLSI
Cornell University


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Class Information

Schedule

The following is the weekly schedule of due dates for assignments, and the dates of quizzes.
  • Sep 7: HW1 out
  • Sep 14: HW1 due, HW2 out, Quiz 1
  • Sep 21: HW2 due, HW3 out
  • Sep 28: HW3 due, HW4 out, Quiz 2
  • Oct 5: HW4 due , HW5 out
  • Oct 7: HW5 out
  • Oct 12 14: HW5 due, HW6 out, Quiz 3
  • Oct 19 21: HW6 due, HW7 out
  • Oct 26 28: HW7 due, project proposal due, Quiz 4
  • Nov 2: Project status 1 due
  • Nov 9: Project status 2 due, Quiz 5
  • Nov 16: Project status 3 due
  • Nov 23: Project status 4 due
  • Dec 7: Project due

Policies

The course's web site is http://vlsi.cornell.edu/courses/ece5740/. It is used to post official announcements, clarifications, errata, etc. You are responsible for keeping up with the announcements posted in this web site.

Office hours are posted. You should take advantage of these to discuss matters that cannot be easily addressed in an electronic form. Please note that students looking for help outside of office hours might not be accomodated depending on the instructor's availability.

The only acceptable late assignment is due to medical reasons. No late submissions will be accepted unless prior permission of the instructor was obtained.

Academic Integrity

The work you (or your group in the case of group assignments) submits is expected to be the result of you (your group's) effort only. The use of a computer in no way modifies the standards of academic integrity expected under the Cornell University Code of Academic Integrity.

You are encouraged to study together and to discuss information and concepts covered in lecture with other students. You can give consulting help to or receive consulting help from such students. However, this cooperation should never involve one group having possession of a copy of all or part of the work done by some other group, including work from previous years

Should copying occur, both the student(s) who copied work from another student and the student(s) who gave material to be copied will automatically receive a zero on the work, and an extra penalty will be assessed, ranging anywhere from a deduction on the final grade to failure of the course and university disciplinary action.

You are strongly encouraged to read Cornell University's Code of Academic Integrity, available on the web.


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