Computer Sciences Dept.

CS/ECE 252 Introduction to Computer Engineering

Spring 2007 Sections 1 and 2
Instructor Mark D. Hill and TAs Marc de Kruijf & Sanghamitra Roy
URL: http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~markhill/cs252/Spring2007/

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Both lectures have moved to a larger room: 107 Psychology.

Arthur C. Clarke wrote, Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.

Do computers seem like magic to you? Would you like to understand how they really work?

Introduction to Computer Engineering (CS/ECE 252) is a two-credit course that surveys the basics of computer hardware and low-level software. You will learn, for example:

  • How the marvel of electronics--the transistor--gets used and interconnected to form computer hardware.
  • How a microprocessor does little more than simple commands (e.g., add two numbers), but does them rapidly -- more than a billion times per second.
  • How treating computer programs like data enables the rich computer systems that we all use.

CS/ECE 252 is available to all students at UW and is especially encouraged for freshman considering majors in computer sciences or engineering. Nevertheless, some computer programming experience (in any language) is helpful. Thus, students without programming experience may wish to first take CS 302 (Introduction to Programming).

Mark Hill will teach both sections 252. The required text is:

Yale N. Patt and Sanjay J. Patel,
Introduction to Computing Systems: from bits and gates to C and beyond
McGraw-Hill Publishers, SECOND Edition, 2004. ISBN: 0-07-246750-9---ISBN 0-07-121503-4 (ISE)

The Spring 2007 offering will be modeled after Parameswaran Ramanathan's Fall 2006 offering.

Hill's next 252 offering will be CS/ECE 252 Section 3 Fall 2007

Catalog Description 2 cr. Logic components built with transistors, rudimentary Boolean algebra, basic combinational logic design, basic synchronous sequential logic design, basic computer organization and design, introductory machine-and assembly-language programming.

CS/ECE 252 is required for majors in Computer Engineering and Computer Sciences and is a prerequisite to both CS/ECE 352 (Digital System Fundamentals and CS/ECE 354 (Machine Organization and Programming).

 
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