CMP 161 -- Final Project Guidelines
Important Dates:
- Jan 22, 2010, midnight -- Preliminary project proposals due.
- Feb 5, 2010, midnight -- Final project proposal due.
- Week of Mar 1, 2010, in class -- Presentation on project work-in-progress.
- Mar 17, 2010, 4-7pm -- Final Project demo and writeup.
NOTE: There will be a 2% LATE PENALTY for EACH item that is late.
The 2% is based on your course grade, not just the project grade!
March 17 is the final deadline.
Nothing will be accepted beyond that date.
Don't wait till the last minute -- allow for machine down-time,
running out of disk space, power failures, etc.
Don't expect to get immediate response to your proposals
if you submit at the last minute!
Final Project:
This is an individual project meant to be developed and completed over
the course of the quarter.
You get to decide what project you want to do -- after we review it.
The main considerations are that:
-
there's sufficient animation and/or visualization content in it,
-
it's a reasonable size project that can be completed within the given time,
-
there's enough variation from other students' project.
Projects are first come, first serve.
It's to your advantage to get your project approved early.
You'll also get a head start and have more time to do a better project.
Preliminary Project Proposal:
Submit
three
project ideas that you would like to work on.
Rank them in the order of your preference.
Provide enough detail to explain each of your idea.
You can submit the list to me,
preferably by email
(or by hardcopy, only if you have drawings).
I will respond to you by email,
so be sure to include your email address in
the hardcopy.
You will get a response within 24 hours. If not,
that means your message got trapped by my spam filter.
Be sure to send from your UCSC account.
If you are including attachments, send me a separate email
(without any attachments, no html tags, etc.) to alert me so
that I can look for your email in case it gets trapped by my spam filter.
Since students should preferably work on different project topics,
those getting the proposals in early and finalized get 1st dibs on the topic.
Check the
approved list of projects to see
the status of your prelim project proposal.
Don't wait till the last minute to submit your proposals since
it may take more than 1 iteration to arrive at your final project.
Final Project Proposal:
This is a 1-2 page writeup describing your final project in more detail.
It also serves as your 1st draft of the Project Report.
Include your name, project title,
project description,
goals (list of different project components/features),
and a time line on when you plan to complete different
pieces of the project.
Also include any research/readings/references you have
read that are relevant to your project.
Create a final project folder or directory and put all
related items in there.
Name this folder proposal.
You should set up your report as an html file.
Name this file index.html.
All contents, images, movies, models, etc., including url materials,
should be contained within the proposal folder.
Proposal Submission.
submit cmps161-ap.w10 proposal proposal
If system does not let you submit a folder, zip or tar the folder before submitting:
submit cmps161-ap.w10 proposal proposal.zip
or
submit cmps161-ap.w10 proposal proposal.tar
Hastily prepared final project proposals that does not meet
these requirements will incur point deductions.
Project Update:
This is an oral presentation of your work-in-progress.
Prepare not more than 5 powerpoint slide that describes
your project, results to date, and remaining work to be
done to complete the project
Include images and/or a live demo if one is available.
In-class presentation is limited to about 5-10 minutes per project.
This exercise will also allow us to trouble shoot any technical
difficulties that may arise during the final project demo on 3/17/10.
Project Requirements:
- Project Demonstration.
Each student will have 5-10 minutes
to present their final project to the class.
Be sure to allow your window to be resized
to the entire screen so folks can see your output.
The demo will be held in our lecture classroom.
Most students prefer to run demos from their own laptops.
If you are a Mac user, be sure to bring a video adaptor to a VGA port.
- Project Report.
This class satisfies the capstone requirement for the CS degree.
Part of this requirement is ``significant writing'' which can be
met by a properly written project report for this class.
The report itself should be in the form of a web page and should
contain the following information.
- your name, which class and quarter,
- title and description of your project,
- images and/or video clips of your project
(links to you-tube are NOT acceptable;
watch your file size and know your disk quota -- 100mb),
- details about your project e.g. data structures, program structure,
related works, your improvements, references, etc.
- a user's guide,
- links to your source code and executable.
This portion of your project requirement requires significantly less time
to prepare compared to code development. Yet, students in the past have
needlessly lost points on this requirement.
Note that all links should be relative (not absolute paths),
and that you should submit the html and all necessary image and
animation files in the same directory.
This time, name that directory proj.
Everything must be contained inside this directory.
No links to external sites allowed.
Create a zip or tar file of all the items of this directory for submission.
- Project Submission.
Create a zip or tar file of your final project folder or directory.
Name this proj.zip or proj.tar respectively.
From unix.ic.ucsc.edu, type:
submit cmps161-ap.w10 proj proj.tar
or
submit cmps161-ap.w10 proj proj.zip
- Include the following:
- your project report (html file and contents)
- an image to be used as thumbnail for your project --
name this file thumb.jpg (even if it's not jpg)
- source code, makefile, etc. to compile your code,
- any *new* data sets, if any,
- README file for information on platform, compilation, etc.,
- at least two favorite images of your project,
"xv" or "snapshot" can be used on the suns;
on the macs, < shift >< apple ><3> keys held down together
will produces a .pict image file of the whole screen,
crop this with your favorite image tool; on windows,
try < control >< printscreen >.
- a short movie clip of your program in action ,
say about 5-10 seconds. Watch the file size and keep it
reasonable. Save movies as quicktime or mpeg.
- VERY IMPORTANT:
I will be checking to make sure you have all the required
components on March 17. Each of you will receive an email
from me confirming that either everything is okay, or you
are still missing something -- on March 18. Missing items
should be turned in by midnight of March 18. Failure to do
so will mean that you did not complete this class. Check
your email on March 18.
- Project Grading.
- There will be no early bonus points, nor will late
programs be accepted.
- However, there will be bonus points for more challenging
projects; and likewise, less points for less challenging
projects. Range is expected to be around +/- 10 points.
- Breakdown of points
- Project Report requirements -- 10%
- Project Demonstration requirements -- 10%
- Project Functionality (meets the proposal goals) -- 80%
CONTEST!
As an added incentive,
we'll be running a competition among your projects.
Winners get a chance to select some goodies.
Here's a sample
voting/entry form
.
Last modified
Tuesday, 22-Jan-2019 09:42:16 PST.