suggestion?

Gregory Nowak greg at romuald.net.eu.org
Fri May 23 20:39:41 EDT 2003


I had a similar problem.

The first cs classes for us are cs101, and cs102, which are taken by cs majors.

Both classes deal with html and java script.
No problem with the html, but the tech. specialist at disability services knew that js was a no go.

So, the department heads debated long and hard, and decided at the end to let me take cs107 instead of the cs101/cs102 sequence.
Cs107 is meant for computer engineering majors, (although they allow cs majors with special situations into it), and it is all intro c++ stuff that you would have gotten from 101/102 anyway, minus the html and js of course.

Hth.
Greg


On Fri, May 23, 2003 at 07:20:53PM -0400, Igor Gueths wrote:
> Hi all. Well, I just got my college schedule for next year, which is
> focused on CS which is what I am majoring in. However, I have noticed a
> fairly large problem. The first semester I have to take a Java class. Once
> I found this out, I thought about how Java is not accessible by any means.
> I mean I have tried about 4 different java runtimes, and none of them
> work. Also, Java applets are a real pain when it comes to being
> accessible. I am trying to work with the DSO (ddisability services office)
> to try to work something out. However, I keep getting the answer "This
> course is required in order to go on to other courses. This is the most
> basic class in the CS major requirements." Does anyone have any
> suggestions to work around this? Or, has anyone been able to use something
> like Freenet, written in Java, successfully? I certainly have not. Thanks
> for any feedback!
> 
> May you code in the power of the source,
> may the kernel, libraries, and utilities be with you,
> throughout all distributions until the end of the epoch.
> 
> 
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