- Home
- Search
- Revaz P Dzhanidze
- COM SCI M117
AD
Based on 9 Users
TOP TAGS
- Tolerates Tardiness
- Has Group Projects
- Issues PTEs
- Uses Slides
- Appropriately Priced Materials
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Sorry, no enrollment data is available.
AD
Recommend this class for when you have a rough/high workload quarter. Basically all you need to do for the final is skim the course reader before hand and mark where the important things are so you can flip to the right page while taking the test. The test is multiple choice and is very straight forward.
There are a few labs in this class, but they just require you to fill out stuff in the course reader, not much additional work. The main thing is the group project, so make sure to take it with friends. You basically need to create some kind of app that uses Wifi/Bluetooth. It doesn't need to be too complex, but I recommend getting it out of the way early and not completing it hackathon-style.
Easiest class I've ever taken. Labs are free points and project is easily doable (people literally copy other people's projects off Github and get all the points). Quiz is only slightly challenging - just flip fast enough. No class after week 3 or so.
The biggest joke in UCLA's course catalog, both inside and outside the school of engineering. Only hard part was the quiz test but flipping through the course reader on the spot will guarantee you a score in the high 70s at least. As long as you do the project, you'll get an A, A- at worst if you somehow lose points on the lab report (which I did). A rare GPA booster so definitely take it.
I listened to all the reviews below and decided to take the class, and it went exactly as expected. The bulk of lectures stopped at the end of week 3, but none of that mattered since I left the moment he finished talking about the syllabus. Even if you were to attend all the lectures, his accent is so thick it's hard to figure out what he's saying anyway.
They also changed the weight for the grades:
2 homeworks, 10% combined
1 lab report, 20%
1 project, 55%
1 quiz test, 15%
1 raw data sheet (from lab), P/NP
You only needed to go to lab twice to do some experiments with Wifi and Bluetooth, which were super easy.
The quiz-test is open book and was kinda stressful only because that was the 2nd time I opened up the $70 course reader in the entire quarter and it was hard to find the material in the 300 pages. Still got a B on the test though, so it really doesn't matter if you study (if you get a C on it, you'll still get an A in the class). The median for the test was a 39/45, and iirc no one got a 100%. Still, I'd definitely recommend to bookmark stuff and know where topics generally are in the reader; it will save you way more time during the test.
The group project was the most work for the class, but as long as your project proposal was reasonable, it shouldn't be hard. All you do is make an application that has to use some form of wireless technology. If don't know how to develop applications, then you'll need to make some friends.
Overall, you'll get an A, Dzhanidze is a legend.
Only take this class if you have a group of friends also enrolled, and if you have an app idea that you want to work on.
You're probably not going to learn much, even if you do go to lecture. I tried for the first week, but you can't really understand what the professor is saying.
You do have to buy a $70 course reader, which you'll use once for the quiz/test.
Overall, it's a nice excuse to work on an app together with friends, and you'll get an A out of it.
This is literally the easiest class I have ever taken at UCLA, both inside and outside the engineering department. On the first day Prof Revaz straight up said that he wanted to give everyone an A in this class. But don't be fooled because the material is actually quite complicated, and he does a pretty bad job of teaching it. It's just that you don't actually have to know any of it to get an A in this class.
There is no midterm or final; there's just a "quiz-test" at the end of the quarter. It's only worth 10% of your grade and is open book/note. The rest of your grade comes from homework/lab assignments and one project worth 50% of your grade. The project is very open ended and it honestly felt like everyone who did it received 100% on it. And also, the lectures and labs stop halfway through the quarter, which I thought was incredibly strange given the fact that there was a lot of material.
So if you're looking for a class that requires very little work, this is your class. If you want to actually learn something, I would look elsewhere.
Recommend this class for when you have a rough/high workload quarter. Basically all you need to do for the final is skim the course reader before hand and mark where the important things are so you can flip to the right page while taking the test. The test is multiple choice and is very straight forward.
There are a few labs in this class, but they just require you to fill out stuff in the course reader, not much additional work. The main thing is the group project, so make sure to take it with friends. You basically need to create some kind of app that uses Wifi/Bluetooth. It doesn't need to be too complex, but I recommend getting it out of the way early and not completing it hackathon-style.
Easiest class I've ever taken. Labs are free points and project is easily doable (people literally copy other people's projects off Github and get all the points). Quiz is only slightly challenging - just flip fast enough. No class after week 3 or so.
The biggest joke in UCLA's course catalog, both inside and outside the school of engineering. Only hard part was the quiz test but flipping through the course reader on the spot will guarantee you a score in the high 70s at least. As long as you do the project, you'll get an A, A- at worst if you somehow lose points on the lab report (which I did). A rare GPA booster so definitely take it.
I listened to all the reviews below and decided to take the class, and it went exactly as expected. The bulk of lectures stopped at the end of week 3, but none of that mattered since I left the moment he finished talking about the syllabus. Even if you were to attend all the lectures, his accent is so thick it's hard to figure out what he's saying anyway.
They also changed the weight for the grades:
2 homeworks, 10% combined
1 lab report, 20%
1 project, 55%
1 quiz test, 15%
1 raw data sheet (from lab), P/NP
You only needed to go to lab twice to do some experiments with Wifi and Bluetooth, which were super easy.
The quiz-test is open book and was kinda stressful only because that was the 2nd time I opened up the $70 course reader in the entire quarter and it was hard to find the material in the 300 pages. Still got a B on the test though, so it really doesn't matter if you study (if you get a C on it, you'll still get an A in the class). The median for the test was a 39/45, and iirc no one got a 100%. Still, I'd definitely recommend to bookmark stuff and know where topics generally are in the reader; it will save you way more time during the test.
The group project was the most work for the class, but as long as your project proposal was reasonable, it shouldn't be hard. All you do is make an application that has to use some form of wireless technology. If don't know how to develop applications, then you'll need to make some friends.
Overall, you'll get an A, Dzhanidze is a legend.
Only take this class if you have a group of friends also enrolled, and if you have an app idea that you want to work on.
You're probably not going to learn much, even if you do go to lecture. I tried for the first week, but you can't really understand what the professor is saying.
You do have to buy a $70 course reader, which you'll use once for the quiz/test.
Overall, it's a nice excuse to work on an app together with friends, and you'll get an A out of it.
This is literally the easiest class I have ever taken at UCLA, both inside and outside the engineering department. On the first day Prof Revaz straight up said that he wanted to give everyone an A in this class. But don't be fooled because the material is actually quite complicated, and he does a pretty bad job of teaching it. It's just that you don't actually have to know any of it to get an A in this class.
There is no midterm or final; there's just a "quiz-test" at the end of the quarter. It's only worth 10% of your grade and is open book/note. The rest of your grade comes from homework/lab assignments and one project worth 50% of your grade. The project is very open ended and it honestly felt like everyone who did it received 100% on it. And also, the lectures and labs stop halfway through the quarter, which I thought was incredibly strange given the fact that there was a lot of material.
So if you're looking for a class that requires very little work, this is your class. If you want to actually learn something, I would look elsewhere.
Based on 9 Users
TOP TAGS
- Tolerates Tardiness (3)
- Has Group Projects (4)
- Issues PTEs (3)
- Uses Slides (3)
- Appropriately Priced Materials (2)