EC ENGR 232D
Communications Networking and Traffic Management for Autonomous Mobile Systems
Description: (Formerly numbered Electrical Engineering 232D.) Lecture, four hours; outside study, eight hours. Requisite: course 131A or equivalent. Analysis, design, and traffic management of autonomous mobile systems. Telecommunication networks, mobile wireless networks, and multiple-access communication systems. Networking architectures, multiple-access communications under adaptive quality-of-service metrics. Switching, routing, networking protocols, and Internet. Autonomous mobile networked systems. Cellular wireless networks, WiFi mesh networks, peer-to-peer mobile ad hoc wireless networks. Autonomous transportation networked systems. Traffic management architectures in support of self-driving cars. Smart grid networks. Adaptive multimedia streaming over mobile wireless networks. Embedded sensor networks. Energy and pollution aware sustainable networking. Security mechanisms. Letter grading.
Units: 4.0
Units: 4.0
Most Helpful Review
Winter 2023 - Prof Rubin is a very nice professor both as a lecturer and individual. The material is hard, and the lectures (which are slides based and supplemented with research papers) are very dense. However, the professor is always willing to give feedback and more insight on topics. He's a very responsive professor via emails and office hours as well. The hardest part would be the increasing difficulties of the homework. The class' grade is based on homework assignments only (we had 6), and the first one or two are pretty easy and straightforward. However, they do get denser as the material gets rolling. Allocate your time carefully because the homework can be time consuming!
Winter 2023 - Prof Rubin is a very nice professor both as a lecturer and individual. The material is hard, and the lectures (which are slides based and supplemented with research papers) are very dense. However, the professor is always willing to give feedback and more insight on topics. He's a very responsive professor via emails and office hours as well. The hardest part would be the increasing difficulties of the homework. The class' grade is based on homework assignments only (we had 6), and the first one or two are pretty easy and straightforward. However, they do get denser as the material gets rolling. Allocate your time carefully because the homework can be time consuming!