<p>do you know if ward is one of the new teachers? nobody seems to know anything about him</p>
<p>check the department web-page, or e-mail the math department. I'm sure they'll tell you.</p>
<p>r30028:</p>
<p>If you are referring to Thomas Ward, he is part of the VIGRE research group. He has taught 33B, 142, and transport phenomena a few years ago.</p>
<p>This is all that is circulated online about him. The rest, you can ask people who took the above courses.</p>
<p>yes t. ward, thanks boelterhall</p>
<p>The HSSEAS OASA website has been revised to be more aesthetically pleasing:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.seasoasa.ucla.edu/%5B/url%5D">http://www.seasoasa.ucla.edu/</a></p>
<p>:rolleyes:</p>
<p>oh wow</p>
<p>but i did like the rainbow</p>
<p>It's nice to see that the website has finally moved from 1997 to 2001.</p>
<p>Completely out of luck if all CS31 classes are filled for this fall?</p>
<p>i dont think so, my orientation counselor mentioned something about auto putting you into the classes and having you schedule the rest of your schedule around the cs 31 class because they are full. they were going to do this to us at 104 but then they realized rohr still had spots left so they didnt do it.</p>
<p>I really doubt this would happen, unless the adds are for Rohr's class. PAB 1434 and Bunche have a capacity of around the current enrollment size.</p>
<p>It would be more reasonable to fit around 120-180 students in PAB 1425 though.</p>
<p>
No, but don't count on Smallberg. :rolleyes:</p>
<p>who's teaching CS 31 in the winter?</p>
<p>Traditionally, it has been Rohr teaching 31 in the winter, with Smallberg and Nachenberg teaching 32. But Nachenberg is gone, so it would mean Rohr or Smallberg doubling up with someone on the staff.</p>
<p>what's the easiest (or "least intense") engineering major?</p>
<p>Civil engineering, not solely because of the difficulty of material, but because of the competition.</p>
<p>Regarding CS (Computer Science) and CSE (Computer Science and Engineering):
1. What are the main differences between them?
2. Does one give an advantage over the other in terms of finding a job?
3. Does one give an advantage over the other in terms of applying for graduate school?
4. In your opinion, which one is better to major in and why?</p>
<p>Adding to Ishness’s post:
5. Which major (CS or CSE) is more likely to make more money out of college?
6. What kind of job would someone graduating with a BS in CS get, vs. someone with a BA in CS? I noticed Berkeley offers a BA, while UCLA offers a BS.
Thank you!</p>
<p>
[ol][<em>]CS majors take more CS courses and more GEs. CSE majors take more EE courses.
[</em>]CS majors have experience in compilers, artificial intelligence, and whatever CS electives they take. CSE majors have experience in circuit analysis, signal processing, computer architecture, and whatever EE courses they take.
[<em>]I would argue that CS has an advantage over CSE for CS graduate school, based on the coursework that only CS majors have to take, and the kind of questions asked on the Computer Science GRE.
[</em>]Personal preference.
[<em>]Neither. They make the same amount of money, and compete for the same jobs.
[</em>]Whether you get a B.A. in CS or a B.S. in CS makes no difference to an employer. Your coursework, GPA and experience matters far more in your job opportunities.[/ol]</p>
<p>If I'm 6/10 on the waiting list for an upper div engineering course, will the professor let me in?</p>
<p>dude what is going on with cs 31?!
<a href="http://www.registrar.ucla.edu/schedule/detselect.aspx?termsel=07F&subareasel=COM+SCI&idxcrs=0031++++%5B/url%5D">http://www.registrar.ucla.edu/schedule/detselect.aspx?termsel=07F&subareasel=COM+SCI&idxcrs=0031++++</a></p>
<p>Smallberg's 2nd lecture is like ?!?!?!
2D = 26 / 0! I want in =[.</p>