2/9/2007: Grades for the introductory Matlab assignment are posted on Blackboard. Individual comments have been emailed to all students.
I kindly ask that email inquiries be limited to two per day. I really do enjoy and encourage communication regarding the assignments, but you should also try to work through some of the smaller bugs on your own, if possible. That said, I will be happy to help if asked; just keep the two-per-day rule as a guide.
Submission instructions and lecture slides for the lab assignment on speech are available under Speech Also, some tips and programming issues with the Pocket PC have been posted under Introduction.
1/30/2007: We will use email as the submission method for the introductory Matlab assignment. So when you are done, please email me (kiemyang@umd.edu) your zip file with the subject line "ENEE408G: intro submission". Once again, your zip file is entitled lastname_intro.zip, and this file contains your three M-files entitled lastname_intro1.m, lastname_intro2.m, and lastname_intro3.m, to be written as functions. This is due by Friday at 9 am.
I have posted your group assignments for lab 1 on the course website under Speech.
As mentioned last week, a USB headset is needed for lab 1, though I realize that maybe not every single student needs one. I ask that at least two members from each group have a USB headset (i.e. headphones plus microphone). You can work this out among your group members on Wednesday or Friday. Certainly, every student will need some sort of listening device, either through regular computer headphones, laptop speakers, etc. The headset isn't really required for this Friday's lab, but the sooner you have it, the better. It will definitely be needed by the following lab, 2/9.
1/25/2007: Welcome to ENEE408G! The first lab session is Friday, 1/26. Please bring any of the following items that you may have: USB drive, USB headset, and/or regular computer headphones.
ENEE408G is an introductory course on multimedia signal processing bringing real-world design experience to students using state-of-the-art multimedia software and hardware. Each week there will be one 75-minute lecture and a three-hour design lab. Lectures will provide basic theories and principles on multimedia compression, processing, communications, security, and recognition.
Prof. Shihab Shamma, sas@umd.edu
Office: AVW 2203, Phone: 301.405.6842, URL: www.ee.umd.edu/faculty/sas.html
Steve Tjoa, kiemyang@umd.edu
Office: KEB 2238, Phone: 301.405.3342, URL: www.wam.umd.edu/~kiemyang
Lecture: Wednesday, 11:00am - 12:15pm, KEB 2107
Lab: Friday, 9:00am - 12:00pm (0102) or 1:00pm - 4:00pm (0101), KEB 2107
ENEE425 or 420 or with instructor’s approval; programming skills in MATLAB and C/C++.
There are four design labs elements on fundamental multimedia issues employing the state-of-the-art technologies on signal processing for speech, audio, image, and video.
This is a team-based project on designing and implementing multimedia signal processing systems. Each student team will emulate a high-tech company that performs the following tasks:
The University of Maryland, College Park has a nationally recognized Code of Academic Integrity, administered by the Student Honor Council. This Code sets standards for academic integrity at Maryland for all undergraduate and graduate students. As a student you are responsible for upholding these standards for this course. It is very important for you to be aware of the consequences of cheating, fabrication, facilitation, and plagiarism. For more information on the Code of Academic Integrity or the Student Honor Council, please visit www.shc.umd.edu.