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ECE:
Office: 205 Phillips (green dot and arrow)
MEng project: 423 Phillips
Digital Lab: 238 Phillips Hall (black dot and arrow)
NBB:
W246 Corson-Mudd Hall (red dot and arrow)
42°26.836' North 76°28.744' West
Electronic:
Voice: (607) 254-4346 -- FAX: (607) 254-1303
Email: BRL4@cornell.edu or bruce.land@cornell.edu

Teaching   ECE 4760 | ECE 5760 | ECE 5030 | Energy Project | Student Designs

Teaching

ECE 476 lecture on motor control

This year I teach three courses, ECE 5760 and ECE 5030 in the fall and ECE 4760 in the spring. ECE 4760 covers microcontrollers as components in electronic design. ECE 5760 deals with system-on-chip design using Verilog and C to design FPGA circuits for embedded applications. ECE 5030 covers electronic bio-instrumentation. I am also running a small MEng renewable energy project in ECE.

Student designs contains work in ECE done since 1998. The Older Material link contains other web-documented courses and earlier Computer Science student projects (1994-98).

Research   Projects | Hardware and software

spider motion

Spider motion summary.

The projects section contains details of my work since 1998. Some of the projects are blog-like, lab notebook style, while others are more finished. Some are elaborations of the methods sections of papers and contain the code used to analyze data.

The hardware and software techniques section contains various items connected to research, teaching, or simply trying to understand the methods section of some paper. These tend to be fairly specialized.

 

Documentation    Talks and Posters | Random Bits | Older Material

Nature Cover

Computed dislocations in a crystal.

Various Journal Club talks I have given are documented, mostly for my own use. Some of the talks overlap the hardware/software section above and several of them contain Matlab code examples. There are also posters presented at NeuroScience and other meetings.

The Random Bits section includes some personal details, such as a resume and a list of coauthors, as well as some pictures of the Life Science Technology Building and pictures of other people and things.

The Older Material link points to various projects, courses, and images from the past. A still image from a large animation project I did at the Cornell Theory Center in 1997 is shown on the right. The animation was based on the simulated fracture of a crystal containing more than 100 million atoms.