Course logistics
Communication
Textbook
The 7th international edition of Computer Networking: A Top-Down Approach, Kurose & Ross. The textbook is not strictly necessary, in the sense that we will not examine any material that is not explicitly taught in class or through the homework and labs. However, it does provide a lot of context and interesting details that could deepen one's understanding of the material.
Katerina will give a classic ex-cathedra lecture every Friday, 15h15-17h00, at SG1138.
Students who cannot attend in person will be able to join remotely via Zoom [ link ]. But please attend in person if you can. Networks may be super exciting, but following a lecture over Zoom is terribly boring...
Labs + homework reviews
- Remotely (with online support), on your own computer
- Remotely (with online support), through vdi.epfl.ch (*)
- Physically present in INF2, on your own laptop
- Physically present in INF3, on an INF3 server
Exams
- There will be two written exams: a midterm and a final.
- Both exams will cover material that was taught in the lectures and through the homework and labs.
- All questions will be stated in English, but you will be free to answer in English or in French.
- The midterm exam will be open-book and will be conducted online (via Moodle).
- The final exam will be closed-book and will be conducted in person during the winter exam session.
- During the final exam, each of you will be welcome to bring your own "aide-mémoire". This is a document of at most 4 two-sided A4 sheets (=8 one-sided A4 pages). It can be hand- or typewritten. It can be a photocopy. It can contain colors and drawings. The font can be as small as you wish, but you should be able to read it without auxiliary tools (e.g., a magnifying glass).
- The midterm grade will count toward your overall grade only if you do well
(see grade computation below).
- You will have the option of taking up to 4 online quizzes (via Moodle).
- Each quiz will cover material from two specific lectures.
- Quiz grades will count toward your final grade only if you do well (see grade computation below).
exam grade = max { 0.3 * midterm-exam grade + 0.7 * final-exam grade, final-exam grade }.
The rational is that some students have not had the time to adjust to the course's style by the midterm exam. These students may do significantly better at the final exam than the midterm exam, in which case we count only their final exam.
Next, we will compute an "overall grade" for each student using the following formula:
overall grade = max { 0.9 * exam grade + 0.1 * quiz grade, exam grade }.