CLICK HERE for Wallace Library web page of resources for this course. 

  Fichier Modifié(e)
Archive ZIP camera_trigger.zip mai 28, 2013 by WILLIAM FREY
Fichier Camera Array.mb 3D software sept. 27, 2012 by BENJAMIN ZENKER
Archive ZIP FIP 2013 Software Package.zip Most Current MATLAB code as of Thursday, May 9th 2013 mai 09, 2013 by BENJAMIN ZENKER
Fichier frame_grabber mai 28, 2013 by WILLIAM FREY
Archive ZIP frame_grabber.zip mai 28, 2013 by WILLIAM FREY
Document Microsoft Word Freshman Summer Project 2012 User Manual With Pictures.docx Document decribing properties of the computer in the Batcave oct. 16, 2012 by Maria Helguera
Document Microsoft Word People to contact for other research.docx Here are some people to email about previous research. déc. 03, 2012 by AMY BECKER
Document Microsoft Word requirements vs. specifications.docx déc. 04, 2012 by MICHAELA PIEL
Fichier PDF SA_user_guide.pdf User guide from BYU janv. 29, 2013 by WESLEY ROBINSON
Document Microsoft Word Specifications vs. requirements.docx déc. 04, 2012 by Matthew Casella
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2 commentaires

  1. Joe Pow dit :

    Two EXTREMELY useful references...

    Here's the link to Vaibhav Vaish's doctoral dissertation - EXCELLENT introduction to synthetic aperture imaging theory.

    http://graphics.stanford.edu/~vaibhav/pubs/thesis.pdf 

    Here's the link to Bennett Wilburn's doctoral dissertation - again... an OUTSTANDING explanation of many of the concepts you've been struggling with.

    http://graphics.stanford.edu/~wilburn/wilburn_thesis.pdf

  2. These are comments related to the posting on Requirements and Specifications:

    > 1. You list, I believe, three sources. In the text you only make
    > reference to one of them.
    >
    > 2. I did a Google search, just to see what pops up. Your first reference
    > (Philosophe) is there, this tells me that you did not use Google scholar as
    > was instructed at the beginning of the fall quarter.
    >
    > 3. I would recommend you do a new search using Google scholar. You will
    > find pages and pages of scholarly references. It would be enough if you were
    > to read and report on the first three or four documents in the first page.