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These pages were developed entirely by students, graduate and undergraduate, who have been involved in virtual reality research at Clemson. The "vrnet'' (vr.clemson.edu) is a virtual network of SGI stations that spans many departments and several colleges. It facilitates sharing new software tools and allows fast exchange of ideas in the development of new applications for virtual reality systems. These pages, maintained by Dr. Andrew Duchowski, describe the work in the Eye Tracking Laboratory, part of Virtual Reality research at Clemson. Real-time, photorealistic graphics has been a subject of research
interest at Clemson University for several years, and we have invested
heavily in state-of-the-art platforms from Silicon Graphics, Inc.
Recognizing that the cost of such platforms can be prohibitive for
individual owners, Clemson has undertaken a study of the feasibility
of obtaining real-time, high quality graphics from low-cost, PC-class
hardware.
Faculty and graduate students in the Department of Computer Science
at Clemson have developed and maintain Linux network device drivers for
the IBM Turboways 25 and Interphase 5515 and 5575 families of ATM adapters.
Discrete algorithms are algorithms designed for objects such as trees, graphs and sequences. One area of focus are self-stabilizing algorithms. The traditional approach in designing fault-tolerant distributed protocols assumes a maximum number of faults and involves a worst-case design by fault masking. Self-stabilizing algorithms make no assumptions about initial data and need no global coordination, and so can recover from arbitrary many faults. These have applications in ad hoc networks.
Here you'll find references to some recent faculty publications.
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