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Grad school: Difference between revisions
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** using [[automata|automata theory]] (Glushkov, Thompson, XFA, etc...) | ** using [[automata|automata theory]] (Glushkov, Thompson, XFA, etc...) | ||
[[ | [[http://dank.qemfd.net/tabpower/msadvice.pdf|Nick's Disarmingly Forthright Advice for GT CSMS Students]] | ||
==Classes== | ==Classes== |
Revision as of 02:03, 15 August 2009
I am currently a Masters student at Georgia Tech's College of Computing, following the MS-Computer Science (Thesis Option) track. I specialize in:
- intrusion detection and prevention (theory and implementation)
- high-performance computing
- algorithms, programming methodologies, languages and compilers for multicore/manycore
- cache-adaptive programming methodologies and compilers
- algorithms and implementation of high-performance pattern matching
- for network security (wire-speed, low-latency, rich operators)
- and bioinformatics (high-volume, gappy/fuzzy, multidimensional)
- using automata theory (Glushkov, Thompson, XFA, etc...)
[Disarmingly Forthright Advice for GT CSMS Students]
Classes
Fall 2008
- CS6262 - Network Security (3 hours)
- CS6290 - High Performance Computer Architecture (3 hours)
Spring 2009
- CS8803MCA - Multicore and Manycore Architecture (3 hours)
- CS7530 - Randomized Algorithms (3 hours)
- CS6238 - Secure Systems (3 hours)
- CS6241 - Compiler Design (3 hours)
Fall 2009 (Tentative)
- CS6390 - Programming Language Design (3 hours)
- CS6550 - Design and Analysis of Algorithms (3 hours)
PhD Applications
- CS GRE Subject Test: 2009-10-10 at GSU
- Scores going to: GT, MIT, Harvard, UWaterloo, UWashington