Visual Basic Project Analyzer 5.0.05 serial key or number

Visual Basic Project Analyzer 5.0.05 serial key or number

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Oracle Hospitality OPERA Property Management Licensing Information User Manual. Release Part Number: E

Transcription

1 Oracle Hospitality Management Licensing Information User Manual Release Part Number: E October 2015

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3 Oracle Hospitality Management Licensing Information User Manual Version Copyright 2015, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. This software and related documentation are provided under a license agreement containing restrictions on use and disclosure and are protected by intellectual property laws. Except as expressly permitted in your license agreement or allowed by law, you may not use, copy, reproduce, translate, broadcast, modify, license, transmit, distribute, exhibit, perform, publish, or display any part, in any form, or by any means. Reverse engineering, disassembly, or decompilation of this software, unless required by law for interoperability, is prohibited. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice and is not warranted to be error-free. If you find any errors, please report them to us in writing. If this software or related documentation is delivered to the U.S. Government or anyone licensing it on behalf of the U.S. Government, then the following notice is applicable: U.S. GOVERNMENT END USERS: Oracle programs, including any operating system, integrated software, any programs installed on the hardware, and/or documentation, delivered to U.S. Government end users are "commercial computer software" pursuant to the applicable Federal Acquisition Regulation and agency-specific supplemental regulations. As such, use, duplication, disclosure, modification, and adaptation of the programs, including any operating system, integrated software, any programs installed on the hardware, and/or documentation, shall be subject to license terms and license restrictions applicable to the programs. No other rights are granted to the U.S. Government. This software or hardware is developed for general use in a variety of information management applications. It is not developed or intended for use in any inherently dangerous applications, including applications that may create a risk of personal injury. If you use this software or hardware in dangerous applications, then you shall be responsible to take all appropriate fail-safe, backup, redundancy, and other measures to ensure its safe use. Oracle Corporation and its affiliates disclaim any liability for any damages caused by use of this software or hardware in dangerous applications. Oracle and Java are registered trademarks of Oracle and/or its affiliates. Other names may be trademarks of their respective owners. Intel and Intel Xeon are trademarks or registered trademarks of Intel Corporation. All SPARC trademarks are used under license and are trademarks or registered trademarks of SPARC International, Inc. AMD, Opteron, the AMD logo, and the AMD Opteron logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Advanced Micro Devices. UNIX is a registered trademark of The Open Group. This software or hardware and documentation may provide access to or information about content, products, and services from third parties. Oracle Corporation and its affiliates are not responsible for and expressly disclaim all warranties of any kind with respect to third-party content, products, and services unless otherwise set forth in an applicable agreement between you and Oracle. Oracle Corporation and its affiliates will not be responsible for any loss, costs, or damages incurred due to your access to or use of third-party content, products, or services, except as set forth in an applicable agreement between you and Oracle. Introduction 1

4 LICENSING INFORMATION USER MANUAL Contents 1 Introduction Licensing Information... 4 Description of Product Editions... 4 Third-Party Notices and/or Licenses Open Source Software or Other Separately Licensed Software Apache Axis2 Framework Apache Log4Net Apache Struts BouncyCastleProvider GNU ZipArchive GNU EKIT GNU SharpZipLib ICMP ICMP (continued) JACOB.jar JSON Webservice components json.org KSOAP-j2se NAnt (GNU Ant) NUnit NSData+Base64.h PayPal, Inc. SDK Roadrunner NT Service TanukiSoftware Java Service Wrapper TDiff XDom Licenses APACHE GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE JUnit Mozilla PayPal, Inc. SDK TanukiSoftware Java Service Wrapper TDiff Oracle Management Licensing Information User Manual

5 1 Introduction This Licensing Information document is a part of the product or program documentation under the terms of your Oracle license agreement and is intended to help you understand the program editions, entitlements, restrictions, prerequisites, special license rights, and/or separately licensed third party technology terms associated with the Oracle software program(s) covered by this document (the Program(s) ). Entitled or restricted use products or components identified in this document that are not provided with the particular Program may be obtained from the Oracle Software Delivery Cloud website ( ) or from media Oracle may provide. If you have a question about your license rights and obligations, please contact your Oracle sales representative, review the information provided in Oracle s Software Investment Guide ( and/or contact the applicable Oracle License Management Services representative listed on Introduction 3

6 LICENSING INFORMATION USER MANUAL 2 Licensing Information Description of Product Editions Management is a comprehensive software suite consisting of tools designed for managing properties in a single or multiple-property environment. This section describes Management and its subproducts, Management Hotel Central Services, and Management Add-Ons. Hospitality Product Subproduct Description Management Management Property Premium Supports full service hotels (which generally includes larger hotels, luxury hotels, resort hotels, and casino hotels) where guests expect a full spectrum of services and amenities. Part Number Management Property Standard Part Number Management Property Lite Provides a scaled-down edition of the Premium version. Supports a feature set for hotels that need functionality beyond the base set provided in the Lite Property Management Services, but not all of the features and capabilities appropriate for a full service hotel. Extended stay and residence hotels would likely fall into this category. Supports a base set of Property Service functionality appropriate for smaller properties or those offering limited services. Part Number Management Property Sales and Catering Premium Part Number Integrated with Property Premium, Standard, or Lite, Management Property Sales and Catering Premium provides a full range of Sales and Catering tools for managing sales, accounts and contacts, activities, group business, catering events, menus, and resources. 4 Oracle Management Licensing Information User Manual

7 Management Hotel Central Services Management Add- Ons Management Property Sales and Catering Standard Part Number Management Property Sales and Catering Lite Part Number Management Central Sales Part Number Management Room Reservation System Part Number Management Customer Loyalty Tracking Part Number Management Mobile Part Number Integrated with OPERA Property Management Premium, Standard, or Lite, Management Property Sales and Catering Property Standard includes tools for managing accounts, contacts and activities, group business, events and function space inventory. Integrated with OPERA Property Management Property Premium, Standard, or Lite, OPERA Property Sales and Catering Lite provides basic sales tools for streamlining sales and managing accounts, contacts, and activities. Maximizes sales for the chain at large, regardless of where the business may materialize. Features include guestroom and function space availability across the entire enterprise, prospective business leads can be sent to selected chain properties based on customer preference and hotel features, and FIT contracts are available for negotiating contracts and monitoring production. Consists of those features and capabilities needed by a central reservation organization when creating and managing reservations for one or multiple properties. This includes tools for querying availability across properties, accessing profiles, making reservations, and composing stay itineraries. Tracks guest profile information along with membership bonus points, promotions, and award point consumption. Affiliations between guests and other designated groups are recorded to allow the guest to negotiate rates. Agents can be associated with a guest to specify commissions when a reservation is made. Extends key front desk and housekeeping functionality to wireless devices like the ipad, Smartphone, and other touch devices. Licensing Information 5

8 LICENSING INFORMATION USER MANUAL Management Advanced Reporting and Analytics Part Number Management Vacation Ownership System Part Number Management Credit Card Encryption Rotation Provides hundreds of metrics to help with queries that show past, present, and future trends for a single property or across the enterprise. Data is globally consolidated from all applications in the database and displayed in an easy-to-understand visual representation to help decision-making. Offers specialized features for mixed-use properties that handle both condo units and hotel rooms. It includes contract-driven reservation management, automatic inventory rotation, and on-demand and scheduled financial statements. Re-encrypts and replaces all data with newly encrypted data. Part Number OCER-001 Management Back Office Extracts financial and statistical data from the Hotel Property Services to be imported into BOF Software. Part Number Management Electronic Signature Capture for Orion Software Captures an electronic signature for a registration card using a table PC, or similar device, and to create a secure encrypted file when active. Part Number Management ID Document Scanning Scans an ID document such as a passport or driver s license and updates the various ID fields of the guest profile record through the interface. Part Number Management Export Files Accesses Export File Utility OPERA Membership Exports. Part Number Oracle Management Licensing Information User Manual

9 Management Property Kiosk Interface Accesses the Generic interface for guest-facing self-service such as check in, checkout, invoice preview. Part Number Management EFT Dynamic Currency Conversion Allows properties to handle dual currency credit card collection from guests making settlement at the hotel. Part Number Management Virtual Room Numbers (Direct Inward Dialing) Property Perpetual Virtual Numbers allow the guest to be contacted from outside without having to go through the operator. The numbers are taken from a pool and are assigned to the guest or the room. Part Number Management Comp Accounting Includes: Comp Routing Authorizers Routing Limits Part Number Licensing Information 7

10 LICENSING INFORMATION USER MANUAL Management Multiproperty Cross Profiles and Configuration Provides the capability to enter and maintain profiles across multiple properties. Part Number Option: Management Multiproperty Cross Reservation Provides the capability to enter and update reservations and view availability across multiple properties. Part Number Option: Management Multiproperty Cross Postings Provides the capability to post transactions across different properties. Part Number Oracle Management Licensing Information User Manual

11 Management Commission Handling Includes file export functionality that is used within the Commission Handling module and allows file sending to a third party. Part Number Option: Management Electronic Commission Data Transfer for World Travel Payment Part Number Option: Management Electronic Commission Data Transfer for Pegasus Systems (HCC) Part Number Option: Management Electronic Commission Data Transfer for National Processing Company Part Number Option: Management Electronic Commission Data Transfer for Infinium Part Number Licensing Information 9

12 LICENSING INFORMATION USER MANUAL Management Membership for Frequent Guest and Flyer Includes functionality for airline frequent flyer programs and property guest loyalty programs. Part Number Option: Management Membership Export Provides the ability to export membership information. Part Number Management Web Self- Service Part Number Includes a collection of web services that provide access to key functionality of Management, such as Availability, Reservations, Profiles, and Membership handling. Option: Management Pricing Interface for Google Hotel Finder Part Number Option: Management Room Key Interface Part Number Oracle Management Licensing Information User Manual

13 Management and Catering Multiproperty Base Enables bookings of groups and events across properties. Part Number Option: Management Sales and Catering Multiproperty Group Room Control and Function Diary Shares Group Rooms Controls (GRC) and Function Diary. Part Number Management Sales and Catering Reporting and Analytics Provides ad hoc reporting for OPERA Sales and Catering with graphical representation and drill-down capabilities. Part Number Management Sales and Catering Web Self-Service Includes a collection of web services that provide access to the key functionality of Sales and Catering. Part Number L Licensing Information 11

14 LICENSING INFORMATION USER MANUAL Third-Party Notices and/or Licenses Open Source Software or Other Separately Licensed Software Required notices for open source or other separately licensed software products or components distributed in Management are identified in the following table along with the applicable licensing information. Additional notices and/or licenses may be found in the included documentation or readme files of the individual third party open source software. Hospitality Product(s) Component(s) Licensing Information Management Hotel Property Systems Apache Axis2 Framework Version 2.0, January 2004 Apache Log4Net Version 2.0, January 2004 Apache Struts Version 2.0, January 2004 Released under the terms of the Apache License Version 2.0, January 2004 The full terms of the license can be seen at and are reproduced at the end of this document. A copy of the License is below. Apache 2.0 Apache Log4Net from the Apache Logging Services Project: Released under the terms of the Apache License Version 2.0, January 2004 A copy of the License is below. Apache Released under the terms of the Apache License Version 2.0, January 2004 The full terms of the license can be seen at and are reproduced at the end of this document. A copy of the License is below. Apache Oracle Management Licensing Information User Manual

15 Hospitality Product(s) Component(s) BouncyCastleProvider GNU ZipArchive Version 2, June 1991 Licensing Information Copyright (c) The Legion Of The Bouncy Castle ( ) Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. Released under the terms of GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE Version 2, June 1991 The full terms of the license can be seen at and are reproduced at the end of this document. A copy of the License is below. GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE Licensing Information 13

16 LICENSING INFORMATION USER MANUAL Hospitality Product(s) Component(s) GNU EKIT Version 2, June 1991 GNU SharpZipLib Version 2, June 1991 ICMP Version 1.04 Licensing Information Released under the terms of GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE Version 2, June 1991 The full terms of the license can be seen at and are reproduced at the end of this document. Original and Modified source can be found in the micros\opera\tools\hexidec Source Code.zip A copy of the License is below. GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE Lib/ Released under the terms of GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE Version 2, June 1991 The full terms of the license can be seen at and are reproduced at the end of this document. A copy of the License is below. GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE ICMP Protocol, Ping This unit encapsulates the ICMP.DLL into an object of type TICMP. Using this object, you can easily ping any host on your network. Works only in 32 bits mode (no Delphi 1) under NT or 95. TICMP is perfect for a console mode program, but if you build a GUI program, you could use the TPing object which is a true VCL encapsulating the TICMP object. Then you can use object inspector to change properties or event handler. This is much simpler to use for a GUI program Oracle Management Licensing Information User Manual

17 Hospitality Product(s) Component(s) ICMP (continued) Licensing Information Creation: January 6, 1997 Version: 1.04 Support: Use the mailing list See website for details. Legal issues: Copyright (C) by Francois PIETTE Rue de Grady 24, 4053 Embourg, Belgium. Fax: This software is provided 'as-is', without any express or implied warranty. In no event will the author be held liable for any damages arising from the use of this software. Permission is granted to anyone to use this software for any purpose, including commercial applications, and to alter it and redistribute it freely, subject to the following restrictions: 1.The origin of this software must not be misrepresented you must not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product documentation would be appreciated but is not required. 2. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must not be misrepresented as being the original software. 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution. 4. You must register this software by sending a picture postcard to the author. Use a nice stamp and mention your name, street address, address and any comment you like to say. Updates: Dec 13, 1997 V1.01 Added OnEchoRequest and OnEchoReply events and removed the corresponding OnDisplay event. This require to modify existing programs. Mar 15, 1998 V1.02 Deplaced address resolution just before use. Sep 24, 1998 V1.93 Changed TIPAddr and others to LongInt to avoid range error problems with Delphi4 Jan 24, 1999 V1.11 Surfaced Flags property to allow fragmentation check (Flags = IP_FLAG_DF to enable fragmentation check). Licensing Information 15

18 LICENSING INFORMATION USER MANUAL Hospitality Product(s) Component(s) JACOB.jar Version 2, June 1991 JSON Webservice components json.org Licensing Information Released under the terms of GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE Version 2, June 1991 The full terms of the license can be seen at and are reproduced at the end of this document. A copy of the License is below. GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE Copyright (c) 2002 JSON.org Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. The Software shall be used for Good, not Evil. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. 16 Oracle Management Licensing Information User Manual

19 Hospitality Product(s) Component(s) KSOAP-j2se NAnt (GNU Ant) Licensing Information OPEN PUBLIC LICENSE ksoap 1 is deprecated and archived at ksoap.objectweb.org. JAR file only contains binaries. NAnt is a free.net build tool. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA USA As a special exception, the copyright holders of this software give you permission to link the assemblies with independent modules to produce new assemblies, regardless of the license terms of these independent modules, and to copy and distribute the resulting assemblies under terms of your choice, provided that you also meet, for each linked independent module, the terms and conditions of the license of that module. An independent module is a module which is not derived from or based on these assemblies. If you modify this software, you may extend this exception to your version of the software, but you are not obligated to do so. If you do not wish to do so, delete this exception statement from your version. A copy of the GNU General Public License is available in the COPYING.txt file included with all NAnt distributions. The GNU Project has more information on the GNU General Public License. A copy of the License is below. GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE Licensing Information 17

20 LICENSING INFORMATION USER MANUAL Hospitality Product(s) Component(s) NUnit NSData+Base64.h PayPal, Inc. SDK Licensing Information Copyright (c) Charlie Poole NUnit is a unit-testing framework for all.net languages. Initially ported from JUnit. Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. NSData+Base64.h Created by Matt Gallagher on 2009/06/03. Copyright 2009 Matt Gallagher. All rights reserved. Permission is given to use this source code file, free of charge, in any project, commercial or otherwise, entirely at your risk, with the condition that any redistribution (in part or whole) of source code must retain this copyright and permission notice. Attribution in compiled projects is appreciated but not required. SDK free license A copy of the License is below. PayPal, Inc. 18 Oracle Management Licensing Information User Manual

21 Hospitality Product(s) Component(s) Roadrunner NT Service TanukiSoftware Java Service Wrapper Version 1.1 TDiff Version 4.1 Licensing Information Copyright (C) 1997 by Joerg Koenig and the ADG mbh, Mannheim, Germany All rights reserved Distribute freely, except: don't remove my name from the source or documentation (don't take credit for my work), mark your changes (don't get me blamed for your possible bugs), don't alter or remove this notice. No warrantee of any kind, express or implied, is included with this software; use at your own risk, responsibility for damages (if any) to anyone resulting from the use of this software rests entirely with the user. Send bug reports, bug fixes, enhancements, requests, flames, etc., and I'll try to keep a version up to date. I can be reached as follows: (company site) (private site) MODIFIED BY TODD C. WILSON FOR THE ROAD RUNNER NT LOGIN SERVICE. HOWEVER, THESE MODIFICATIONS ARE BROADER IN SCOPE AND USAGE AND CAN BE USED IN OTHER PROJECTS WITH NO CHANGES. MODIFIED LINES FLAGGED/BRACKETED BY "//!! TCW MOD" Tanuki Software, Ltd. Community Software License Agreement A copy of the License is below. TanukiSoftware TDiff - Text Diff Comparison Tool Component: TDiff Version: 4.1 Date: 2 June 2008 Compilers: Delphi 7 A copy of the License is below. TDiff Licensing Information 19

22 LICENSING INFORMATION USER MANUAL Hospitality Product(s) Component(s) XDom3 Licensing Information XDom3 - XML Parser The contents of the Extended Document Object Model files are subject to the Mozilla Public License Version 1.1 (the "License"); you may not use these files except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations under the License. The Original Code is "Xdom_3_2.pas". The Initial Developer of the Original Code is Dieter Köhler (Heidelberg, Germany, " Portions created by the Initial Developer are Copyright (C) Dieter Köhler. All Rights Reserved. Alternatively, the contents of this files may be used under the terms of the GNU General Public License Version 2 or later (the "GPL"), in which case the provisions of the GPL are applicable instead of those above. If you wish to allow use of your version of this files only under the terms of the GPL, and not to allow others to use your version of this files under the terms of the MPL, indicate your decision by deleting the provisions above and replace them with the notice and other provisions required by the GPL. If you do not delete the provisions above, a recipient may use your version of this file under the terms of any one of the MPL or the GPL. A copy of the License is below. Mozilla 20 Oracle Management Licensing Information User Manual

23 3 Licenses APACHE 2.0 Apache License Version 2.0, January TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR USE, REPRODUCTION, AND DISTRIBUTION 1. Definitions. "License" shall mean the terms and conditions for use, reproduction, and distribution as defined by Sections 1 through 9 of this document. "Licensor" shall mean the copyright owner or entity authorized by the copyright owner that is granting the License. "Legal Entity" shall mean the union of the acting entity and all other entities that control, are controlled by, or are under common control with that entity. For the purposes of this definition, "control" means (i) the power, direct or indirect, to cause the direction or management of such entity, whether by contract or otherwise, or (ii) ownership of fifty percent (50%) or more of the outstanding shares, or (iii) beneficial ownership of such entity. "You" (or "Your") shall mean an individual or Legal Entity exercising permissions granted by this License. "Source" form shall mean the preferred form for making modifications, including but not limited to software source code, documentation source, and configuration files. "Object" form shall mean any form resulting from mechanical transformation or translation of a Source form, including but not limited to compiled object code, generated documentation, and conversions to other media types. Licenses 21

24 LICENSING INFORMATION USER MANUAL "Work" shall mean the work of authorship, whether in Source or Object form, made available under the License, as indicated by a copyright notice that is included in or attached to the work (an example is provided in the Appendix below). "Derivative Works" shall mean any work, whether in Source or Object form, that is based on (or derived from) the Work and for which the editorial revisions, annotations, elaborations, or other modifications represent, as a whole, an original work of authorship. For the purposes of this License, Derivative Works shall not include works that remain separable from, or merely link (or bind by name) to the interfaces of, the Work and Derivative Works thereof. "Contribution" shall mean any work of authorship, including the original version of the Work and any modifications or additions to that Work or Derivative Works thereof, that is intentionally submitted to Licensor for inclusion in the Work by the copyright owner or by an individual or Legal Entity authorized to submit on behalf of the copyright owner. For the purposes of this definition, "submitted" means any form of electronic, verbal, or written communication sent to the Licensor or its representatives, including but not limited to communication on electronic mailing lists, source code control systems, and issue tracking systems that are managed by, or on behalf of, the Licensor for the purpose of discussing and improving the Work, but excluding communication that is conspicuously marked or otherwise designated in writing by the copyright owner as "Not a Contribution." "Contributor" shall mean Licensor and any individual or Legal Entity on behalf of whom a Contribution has been received by Licensor and subsequently incorporated within the Work. 2. Grant of Copyright License. Subject to the terms and conditions of this License, each Contributor hereby grants to You a perpetual, worldwide, non-exclusive, no-charge, royaltyfree, irrevocable copyright license to reproduce, prepare Derivative Works of, publicly display, publicly perform, sublicense, and distribute the Work and such Derivative Works in Source or Object form. 3. Grant of Patent License. Subject to the terms and conditions of this License, each Contributor hereby grants to You a perpetual, worldwide, non-exclusive, no-charge, royalty-free, irrevocable (except as stated in this section) patent license to make, have made, use, offer to sell, sell, import, and otherwise transfer the Work, where such license applies only to those patent claims licensable by such Contributor that are necessarily infringed by their Contribution(s) alone or by combination of their Contribution(s) with the Work to which such Contribution(s) was submitted. If You institute patent litigation against any entity (including a cross-claim or counterclaim in a lawsuit) alleging that the Work or a Contribution incorporated within the Work constitutes direct or contributory patent infringement, then any patent licenses granted to You under this License for that Work shall terminate as of the date such litigation is filed. 4. Redistribution. You may reproduce and distribute copies of the Work or Derivative Works thereof in any medium, with or without modifications, and in Source or Object form, provided that You meet the following conditions: 22 Licenses

25The contents of the NOTICE file are for informational purposes only and do not modify the License. You may add Your own attribution notices within Derivative Works that You distribute, alongside or as an addendum to the NOTICE text from the Work, provided that such additional attribution notices cannot be construed as modifying the License. You may add Your own copyright statement to Your modifications and may provide additional or different license terms and conditions for use, reproduction, or distribution of Your modifications, or for any such Derivative Works as a whole, provided Your use, reproduction, and distribution of the Work otherwise complies with the conditions stated in this License. 5. Submission of Contributions. Unless You explicitly state otherwise, any Contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the Work by You to the Licensor shall be under the terms and conditions of this License, without any additional terms or conditions. Notwithstanding the above, nothing herein shall supersede or modify the terms of any separate license agreement you may have executed with Licensor regarding such Contributions. 6. Trademarks. This License does not grant permission to use the trade names, trademarks, service marks, or product names of the Licensor, except as required for reasonable and customary use in describing the origin of the Work and reproducing the content of the NOTICE file. 7. Disclaimer of Warranty. Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, Licensor provides the Work (and each Contributor provides its Contributions) on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied, including, without limitation, any warranties or conditions of TITLE, NON-INFRINGEMENT, MERCHANTABILITY, or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. You are solely responsible for determining the appropriateness of using or redistributing the Work and assume any risks associated with Your exercise of permissions under this License. Licenses 23

26 LICENSING INFORMATION USER MANUAL 8. Limitation of Liability. In no event and under no legal theory, whether in tort (including negligence), contract, or otherwise, unless required by applicable law (such as deliberate and grossly negligent acts) or agreed to in writing, shall any Contributor be liable to You for damages, including any direct, indirect, special, incidental, or consequential damages of any character arising as a result of this License or out of the use or inability to use the Work (including but not limited to damages for loss of goodwill, work stoppage, computer failure or malfunction, or any and all other commercial damages or losses), even if such Contributor has been advised of the possibility of such damages. 9. Accepting Warranty or Additional Liability. While redistributing the Work or Derivative Works thereof, You may choose to offer, and charge a fee for, acceptance of support, warranty, indemnity, or other liability obligations and/or rights consistent with this License. However, in accepting such obligations, You may act only on Your own behalf and on Your sole responsibility, not on behalf of any other Contributor, and only if You agree to indemnify, defend, and hold each Contributor harmless for any liability incurred by, or claims asserted against, such Contributor by reason of your accepting any such warranty or additional liability. END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS APPENDIX: How to apply the Apache License to your work. To apply the Apache License to your work, attach the following boilerplate notice, with the fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying information. (Don't include the brackets!) The text should be enclosed in the appropriate comment syntax for the file format. We also recommend that a file or class name and description of purpose be included on the same "printed page" as the copyright notice for easier identification within third-party archives. Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner] Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. 24 Licenses

27 GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE Version 2, June 1991 Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA , USA Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. Preamble The licenses for most software are designed to take away your freedom to share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General Public License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free software--to make sure the software is free for all its users. This General Public License applies to most of the Free Software Foundation's software and to any other program whose authors commit to using it. (Some other Free Software Foundation software is covered by the GNU Lesser General Public License instead.) You can apply it to your programs, too. When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not price. Our General Public Licenses are designed to make sure that you have the freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge for this service if you wish), that you receive source code or can get it if you want it, that you can change the software or use pieces of it in new free programs; and that you know you can do these things. To protect your rights, we need to make restrictions that forbid anyone to deny you these rights or to ask you to surrender the rights. These restrictions translate to certain responsibilities for you if you distribute copies of the software, or if you modify it. For example, if you distribute copies of such a program, whether gratis or for a fee, you must give the recipients all the rights that you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the source code. And you must show them these terms so they know their rights. We protect your rights with two steps: (1) copyright the software, and (2) offer you this license which gives you legal permission to copy, distribute and/or modify the software. Also, for each author's protection and ours, we want to make certain that everyone understands that there is no warranty for this free software. If the software is modified by someone else and passed on, we want its recipients to know that what they have is not the original, so that any problems introduced by others will not reflect on the original authors' reputations. Finally, any free program is threatened constantly by software patents. We wish to avoid the danger that redistributors of a free program will individually obtain patent licenses, in effect making the program proprietary. To prevent this, we have made it clear that any patent must be licensed for everyone's free use or not licensed at all. Licenses 25

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Источник: [https://torrent-igruha.org/3551-portal.html]
, Visual Basic Project Analyzer 5.0.05 serial key or number

mandatorydisclosure - JJ College of Engineering & Technology

I. NAME OF THE INSTITUTION

MANDATORY DISCLOSURE

Name J. J. COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING & TECHNOLOGY

Address

Ammapettai, Poolankulathupatti (Post), Sri Rangam Taluk,

Tiruchirappalli - 620 009.

Permanent Location (as approved by AICTE)

Village Ammapettai, Poolankulathupatti (PO)

Taluk Srirangam

District Tiruchirappalli

Pin Code 620 009

State Tamil Nadu

STD Code 0431

1

Phone No: 2695606 /

2695609

Fax No. 0431 – 269 5605 E-Mail: principal@jjcet.ac.in

Web site w w w . j j c e t . a c . i n

Nearest Railway Station Tiruchirappalli Junction Distance in Kms: 16 km

Nearest Airport Tiruchirappalli Airport Distance in Km: 25 km

II. NAME & ADDRESS OF THE PRINCIPAL

Name Dr. S.Sathiyamoorthy

Designation Principal

Qualification &

Experience :

Date of Birth:

18-05-1970

Highest

Degree

Ph.D.

Specialization Total

Experience

18 Yrs of

Electronics & Teaching,

Communication Research &

Engg.

Industry

STD Code 0431

Phone No. (O)

269 5620

Fax No.

0431-269 5605

STD Code 0431 Phone No. (R) - Fax No. -

E-Mail principal@jjcet.ac.in

Mobile No:

9443113476


III. NAME OF THE AFFILIATING UNIVERSITY

Name Anna University Tiruchirappalli

Address Pudukottai Road, Trichy‐24.

Pin Code

620 024. Period of

Affiliation

2

Up to 2009 – 10

Awaiting result of

affiliation for 2012 – 13

STD Code 0431 Phone No. 2407946

Fax No. 0431‐2407333 E‐Mail / Website www.tau.org.in

IV. GOVERNING BODY MEMBERS

Sl.

No

Members of the Board Background Position

1 Mr. K. Ponnusamy, M.Sc., B.L., Advocate Chairman

2 Mrs. V.Priya, MBA, MFM Industrialist

Vice Chair‐

person

3 Mr. G. Venketesan Industrialist Secretary

4 Mrs. P. Prabavathy Agriculturist Trustee

5 Mrs. Renuka Jayaraman Agriculturist Trustee


Members of Governing council

S. No Name Designation

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

Prof. K. Ponnusamy, M.Sc.,B.L.

Chairman,

J.J. Educational, Health and Charitable Trust ,

Tiruchirappalli – 620 009.

Mrs. Pon. Priya, MBA., MFM.,

Vice - Chairperson,

J.J. Educational, Helath and Charitable Trust,

Tiruchirappalli – 620 009.

Mr. G. Venkatesan,

Secretary,

J.J. Educational, Health and Charitable Trust,

Tiruchirappalli – 620 009.

Dr. SW. Rajamanoharane, M.Tech., MBA.,Ph.D.,

Director-Management studies,

J.J. CollegeofEngineering and Technology,

Tiruchirappalli – 620 009.

Dr. G. Paulraj, M.E., Ph.D.,

HoD/ Production Engineering Department,

J.J. CollegeofEngineering and Technology,

Tiruchirappalli – 620 009.

Director,

Southern Regional Office, AICTE,

Nungambakkam,

Chennai-600 006.

(OR) His nominee

Dr. R. Narayanan,

Associate Professor,

Dept. of Mechanical Engineering.,

Alagappa Chettiar Collegeof Engg.and Technology,

Karaikudi – 630 004.

Registrar,

Anna University ofTechnology, Tiruchirappalli,

Tiruchirappalli - 620 024.

(OR) His nominee

Padmashri. Prof. R.M. Vasagam,

Former VC, Anna University, Chennai &

Chairman,

National Design & Research Forum,

Institution of Engineers India,

#3, Dr.B.R. Ambedkar Veedhi,

Bangalore - 560 001.

3

Chairman

Member

( Nominee of the Trust)

Member

( Nominee of the Trust)

Member

(Faculty Nominee of the Trust)

Member

(Faculty Nominee of the Trust)

Member

(Ex - Officio)

Member

( Nominee of the DOTE)

Member

(Ex - Officio)

Member

(Nominee of the Trust - Senior

Academician)


10.

11.

12.

13.

14.

Dr. V. Shanmuganathan, B.E.,M.Sc.,(Engg.),Ph.D.,

Director,

J.J. Group of Institutions,

Tiruchirappalli-620 009.

Dr. K. Seenivasagam,

Joint Director (Retd.),

Directorate of Collegiate Education,

Government of Tamilnadu,

Chennai.

Dr. T. Sivasankaran, M.Tech., Ph.D.,

Executive Director,

J.J. Group of Institutions,

Tiruchirappalli-620 009.

Thiru K. Chandrasekaran,

Addl. General Manager, BHEL.,(Retd.)

No.4, Sakthi Colony, V.O.C. Road,

Cantonment,

Tiruchirappalli -620 001.

Mr. A. Ramasubramanian,

General Manager ,

Insight Engineering Systems Pvt. Ltd.,

Chromepet, Chennai – 600 044.

4

Member

(Nominee of the Trust-

Academician)

Member

(Nominee of the Trust-

Academician)

Member

(Nominee of the Trust

Academician)

Member

(Nominee of the Trust

Industrialist)

Member

(Nominee of the Trust

Industrialist)

15. AICTE Nominee To be Nominated

16. AICTE Nominee -- do --

17. AICTE Nominee -- do --

18. State Government Nominee -- do --

19. State Government Nominee -- do --

20. State Government Nominee -- do --

21. UGC Nominee -- do --

22.

Dr. S. Sathiyamoorthy, M.E., Ph.D.,

Principal,

J.J. CollegeofEngineering and Technology,

Tiruchirappalli – 620 009.

Frequency of the Board Meetings and Academic Advisory Body

i) Board Trust meetings are held twice in a year.

ii) Governing Council meeting was lastly held on 17.06.2012

Principal & Member Secretary

(Ex-Officio)


Organizational chart and processes

CHAIRMAN

DIRECTOR FINANCE OFFICER

EXECUTIVE

DIRECTOR

PRINCIPAL

VICE PRINCIPAL

DEANS REGISTRAR

HEADS OF THE

DEPARTMENTS

STAFF MEMBERS

TECHNICAL

ASSISTANTS

5

ADMINISTRATIVE

OFFICER

ACCOUNTANT

CLERICAL STAFF

MEMBERS

CLERICAL STAFF

MEMBERS OFFICE ATTENDERS

DTP OPERATORS

SKILLED OFFICE ATTENDERS

ASSISTANTS

LAB/DEPT. ATTENDERS


Nature and Extent of involvement of faculty and students in

academic affairs/improvements

ACADEMIC AFFAIRS MONITORING COUNCIL

This council monitors most of the academic activities. It has the following cells to carry

out the various activities

1. ACADEMIC PROGRAMME CELL:

This cell makes the academic calendar for the whole year indicating the days of

periodical

test, opening and closing dates of the semester etc.

2. ATTENDANCE CELL:

The attendances of all the students are collected and entered everyday. Computer

entries are made and monthly reports are prepared. These reports are sent to different

department heads and parents for taking corrective actions.

3. EXAMINATION CELL:

To evaluate the performance of the students regular monthly test / cycle tests

are conducted. Students must take serious note of this and write the test with utmost

care. The Statement of Marks will be sent to the parents. If the performance is not upto

the mark, parents are advised to meet the Head of the Department immediately after the

receipt of the statement of marks from the college. A student, who is found guilty of any

malpractice either in the monthly test or in the University Examinations, will be severely

dealt with.

6


IV. PROGRAMMES

Sl.

no

1

Name of the Programmes Approval of AICTE

BE Mechanical Engineering Approved

2 BE Electrical and Electronics Engg. Approved

3 BE Electronics and Communication Engg. Approved

4 UNDER BE Computer Science and Engineering Approved

5 GRADUATE BE Information Technology Approved

6 PROGRAMMES BE Electronics and Instrumentation Approved

7 BE Production Engineering Approved

8 BE Civil Engineering Approved

9 BE Aeronautical Engineering Approved

10

ME Computer Science and Engineering Approved

POST

11 ME CAD/CAM Approved

12

GRADUATES

PROGRAMMES

ME Power Electronics and Drives Approved

13 ME Applied Electronics Approved

14 ME Thermal Engineering Approved

15 ME Power systems Engineering Approved

16

17

18

M.E. Control Instrumentation

Engineering

M.E. Structural Engineering and

Construction ( Part‐Time) Engineering

M. Tech Information and

Communication

7

Approved

Approved

Approved


Name of the Programmes Accredited by the AICTE

Sl. No Name of the Programmes Accreditation of AICTE

1 BE Electrical & Electronics Engineering Applied for renewal

2 BE Computer Science and Engineering Accredited by NBA for 2 years w.e.f 4.1.2013

3 BE Civil Engineering Accredited by NBA for 2 years w.e.f 4.1.2013

4 BE Mechanical Engineering Accredited by NBA for 2 years w.e.f 4.1.2013

5 B.Tech Information Technology Accredited by NBA for 2 years w.e.f 4.1.2013

6 B.E. Electronics and Instrumentation Accredited by NBA for 2 years w.e.f 4.1.2013

7 B.E. Production Engineering Applied for renewal

8 B.E. Electronics and Communication

Engineering

Details of Fees Structures:

Applied for renewal

Sl. No Name

No. of

Seat

Duration

(in years)

Fees

(in Rs.)

01 BE Mechanical Engineering 120 4

Accredited ‐

02 BE Electrical and Electronics Engg. 120 4 Rs.40,000/‐per

03 BE Electronics and Communication Engg. 120 4

Year

04 BE Computer Science and Engineering 120 4

05 BE Information Technology 120 4

06 BE Electronics and Instrumentation 60 4

07 BE Production Engineering 30 4

08 BE Civil Engineering 60 4

09 BE Aeronautical Engineering 60 4

09 ME Computer Science and Engineering 25 2

10 ME CAD/CAM 18 2

11 ME Power Electronics &Drives 18 2

12 ME Applied Electronics 18 2

13 ME Thermal Engineering 18 2

14 ME Power systems Engineering 18 2

15 M.E. Control Instrumentation

Engineering

16 M.E. Structural Engineering and

Construction ( Part‐Time) Engineering

17. M. Tech Information and

Communication

8

18 2

18 2

18 2

Non accredited ‐

Rs.32,500/‐ per

Year

For management

quota students ‐

Rs.62,500/‐ per

Year (from 2008‐

2009)

Rs.22,500/‐ per

Semester


PLACEMENT FACILITIES:

Placement section endeavors to provide career planning, employability Enhancement

an d job seeki ng a ssista nce to stude n ts . The department of Training and Placement

is headed by

1. Prof. M. Mahendran Training Officer & HOD

2. Prof. Senthil K. Nathan T&P Officer

3. Mr. V. Subramani T&P Officer

4. Mrs. V. Chithra Trainee Officer

5. Mr. J. Thileepan Trainee Officer

6. Mr. M. Chandra Mohan Trainee Officer

The department is equipped with all facilities for training the students in various

personality development programmes. Our students are trained in niche UG & PG Technical

Degree Domain. Students are also given guidance on the resume and application

preparations. Some of the Companies, who recruited our students, are:

• INFOSYS

• TATA CONSULTANCY SERVICES

• CTS

• CARITOR INDIA

• IFLEX

• WIPRO

• SLASHSUPPORT

• DSRC

• UCAL FUEL

• SYSCON

• SPECTRUM

• SPATHIA

• SAFE ZONE

• RELIANCE COMMUNICATION

• VAGUS

• ANBAKAM Metals

• TRIX

• RAMCO SYSTEMS

• SAKHI Autos

• DELL

• CSC

• COSMIC Electricals

• HARIHARA Alloy

• Sree Energy Valves

9


• SKAVA

• FOXCONN

• Placement Details

Total number of students placed by the institution through its placement cell (Discipline Wise)

2009‐2010

2010‐2011

Year Discipline

2011-2012

Total No of

students Passed out

10

Total Students

Placed through

Placement Cell

ECE 123 42

CSE 99 48

EEE 80 34

MECH 54 1

PROD 10 0

IT 70 5

EI 13 0

Civil 30 0

ECE 108 71

CSE 113 64

EEE 92 47

MECH 53 29

PROD 10 04

IT 90 40

EI 12 12

Civil 41 19

Aero 58 2

ECE 122 73

CSE 114 56

EEE 122 49

MECH 101 45

PROD 27 19

IT 120 38

EI 56 24

Civil 49 9


Sl.

N

o

• Provide details of companies or industries, which visited the institute for placement

since the last three years.

Number of Students

Year Name of Company/Industry

placed

1. 2009‐2010

2. 2010-2011

SYSCON 17

SPECTRUM 62

SPATHIA 02

SAFE ZONE 02

RELIANCE

VAGUS 06

ANBAKAM Metals 02

TRIX 01

RAMCO SYSTEMS 02

SAKHI Autos 03

DELL 01

CSC 02

COSMIC Electricals 01

HARIHARA Alloy 02

Sree Energy Valves 01

SKAVA 01

FOXCONN 01

SLASH Support 78

SRI VIGNESH POLY 07

CTS 08

ACCESS 08

RELIANCE Life 03

ACCENTURE 02

TCS 02

RENAULT NISSAN

HCL TECH

BAHWAN CYBERTEK

IFIN

VAGUS TECH

11

1

86

10

4

2


ANBAKAM METALS

AON HEWITT

BAJAJ CAPITAL

CRDC

CCCL

CSS

SUTHERLAND GLOBAL

URC

RELIANCE COMMUNICATIONS

IVRCL

GLOBAL LOGIC

EUREKA FORBES

INDIA INFOLINE

TALK MEDIA

MAHINDRA SATYAM

HCL BSERVE

SHRIRAM TRANSPORT FINANCE

SRM

ASPIRING SYSTEMS

STC TECH

MAHINDRA & MAHINDRA

TURBO ENERGY

BAJAJ ALLIANZ

HARIHAR ALLOYS

INDIA MART

ADIENT SOLNS.

12

2

1

3

3

1

55

10

08

10

10

04

01

40

14

03

09

01

01

01

49

01

02

03

12

08

21


2011-2012

01

TVE ISO

09

ACOUSTICS

26

TESPRO

01

KC MILK

01

NAVY

01

DALKIA INDIA

02

CETHAR VESSELS

HCL TECHNOLOGIES 17

ZEP INFRATECH 28

BAJAJ ALLIANZ 30

AAS TECHNOLOGIES 10

SYNTEL 1

S ACCORD 46

TALK MEDIA 5

BAHWAN CYBERTEK 2

GDI 40

BAJAJ CAPITAL 15

COCA COLA 5

WIPRO 9

IDEA ELAN 2

INDUS TEQSITE 1

CTS 9

HEXAWARE 1

RJP INFOTEK 3

A&T NETWORK SYSTEM 4

ADS 3

13


AUROLAB 2

CONSIM 10

DEXTRASYS TECHNOLOGIES

3

PVT LTD

LGB 15

MELSS SYSTEM 8

NTTF 28

PONPURE CHEMICALS 5

SANKOU TECHNOLOGY 10

SUTHERLAND 13

RISHI LAZER 13

INVEST2CARE 5

RELIANCE ADA 5

PANCHAMI MANAGEMENT

17

CONSULTANCY

SUTHERLAND GLOBAL

1

SERVICES

MICROTEK 1

WABCO 1

SREENIDHI MANAGEMENT

8

CONSULTANCY SERVICES

IBM 2

AURA NETWORK 1

IDENTITIVE TECHNOLOGIES 2

TECLEVER PVT.LTD. 1

247 HEAD HUNTING 9

NISSI INFOTECH 1

VV GROUP OF COMPANIES 3

ANJALI OIL 1

ABI 2

SREE ENERGY VALVE 4

14


VII. PROFILE OF DIRECTOR/PRINCIPAL WITH QUALIFICATIONS, TOTAL EXPERIENCE, AGE AND

DURATION OF EMPLOYMENT AT THE INSTITUTE CONCERNED

Name : Dr. S.Sathiyamoorthy

Date of Birth : 18-05-1970

Academic qualifications (with field of

specialization): Ph.D.

M.E.

B.E.

Details of Experience (Academic / Industrial):

Name of Post

J.J. Collegeof

Engineering,

Tiruchirappalli.

J.J. Collegeof

Engineering,

Tiruchirappalli

J.J. Collegeof

Engineering,

Tiruchirappalli.

J.J. Collegeof

Engineering,

Tiruchirappalli.

Tamil Nadu Metal

Industries

/

Academic/Industrial

Principal 05-09-2011

Professor 01-07-2007

Asst. Professor 01-07-2002 31-06-2007

15

Date Total Period

From To Year Month

Till Date 1 -

Till Date 5 -

Lecturer 05.08.1997 01-06-2002 5

Electrical Supervisor 06-05-1991 31-04-1992

TNEB Apprentice Training 1

Date of the appointment in the present institution: 05.08.1997

5

1

-

-

-

-


VIII. FEE

Details of fee, as approved by State fee Committee, for the Institution.

UNDERGRADUATE : Accredited Rs.40, 000/‐ per Year

Non‐Accredited Rs.32, 500/‐ per Year

For management quota students ‐Rs.62,500/‐ per

Year

(from

2008‐200

9)

POST GRADUATE : ME Rs.22500/‐ per Semester

• Time schedule for payment of fee for the entire programme ‐ 15 th June of

Every Year

• No. of Fee waivers granted with amount and name of students ‐ 40

• Number of scholarship offered by the institute, duration and amount ‐ NIL

• Criteria for fee waivers/scholarship ‐ Poor

Students

Estimated cost of boarding and Lodging in Hostels.

Common Room : Rs. 10,000/‐ per year

Double Room with attached batch : Rs 16,000/‐ per year

Double Room without attached batch : Rs 13,000/‐ per year

Mess Bill : 22,000 per year

16


Number of seats sanctioned with the year of approval.

Sl. No Branch Seats Year

1 Mech 120 1994‐1995

2 EEE 120 1994‐1995

3 ECE 120 1996‐1997

4 CSE 120 1994‐1995

5 IT 120 1998‐1999

6 EI 60 1998‐1999

7 Prod 60 1999‐2000

8 Civil 60 2004‐2005

9 Aeronautical 60 2007‐2008

10 ME‐CSE 25 2003‐2004

11 ME‐CADCAM 18 2004‐2005

12 ME‐PED 18 2004‐2005

13 ME‐AE 18 2004‐2005

14 ME-Thermal 18 2010-2011

15 ME-PS 18 2010-2011

16 ME-C&I 18 2010-2011

17 M.E. Structural Engg &

Construction ( PT)

Engineering

18 2011-2012

18 M. Tech Information and

Communication

18 2011-2012

Number of students admitted under various categories each year in the last three years.

Branch 2009-2010 2010-2011 2011-2012

Mech 117 118 119

EEE 115 113 115

ECE 118 115 113

CSE 97 116 113

IT 75 111 111

EI 51 58 52

Prod 27 28 35

Civil 57 59 57

Aeronautical 55 55 54

ME-CSE 28 27 28

ME-CAD/CAM 20 11 17

ME-PED 20 20 20

ME- AE 20 20 20

ME-Thermal - 02 17

ME-PS - 18 20

M.E C&I - - 19

17


ADMISSION PROCEDURE

Mention the admission test being followed, name and address of the Test Agency

and its URL (website).

i. Admissions are made for 65% Govt. Quota. Selection is made under

single windows system by Anna University, Chennai

Secretary, Tamil Nadu Engg. Admission Sardar Patel Road, Guindy, Chennai‐25.

www.annauniv.edu

ii. 35% of seats are filled under management quota. Tests are conducted by

Association ofEngineering colleges.

Consortium of self‐financing, Professional Arts and Science colleges in Tamilnadu

29/12 Ganapathy Street, Rayapet,

Chennai‐600014 www.tnsfconstrium.org

Number of seats allotted to different Test Qualified candidates separately

[AIEEE/CET

(State conducted test/University tests)/Association conducted

test] State Conduct test ‐ 65% seats

Association Conduct test ‐ 35% seats

Calendar for admission against management/vacant seats:

Last date for request of applications 20 th June

Last date for submission of application 20 th July

Dates for announcing final results 10 th August

Release of admission list 10 th August

Date for acceptance by the candidate 15 th August

Last date for closing of admission 25 th August

Starting of the Academic session 1 st September

Refunded

Policy of refund

(Clearly notified, in case of withdrawal)

(Dates will be changed as per Government announcement)

18


Sl.

No

XI. CRITERIA AND WEIGHTAGES FOR ADMISSION

Describe each criteria with its respective weightages i.e., Admission

Test, marks in qualifying examination etc.

Aggregate of Qualifying Exam and Marks in CET

Marks in qualifying examination 200

Mention the minimum level of acceptance, if any.

QUALIFYING EXAM

Branch Academic

Year

Sl.No Candidates Level of Acceptance

1 OC 55%

2 BC 50%

3 MBC 45%

4 SC/ST Minimum pass

Mention the cut‐off levels of percentage & percentile scores of the

candidates in the admission test for the last three years.

Max.

Rank

OC BC(M) BC MBC

Max.

Rank

Max.

Rank

Min.

cut‐off

19

Max.

Rank

Min.

cut‐off

Max.

Rank

Min.

cut‐off

Max.

Rank

SC

Min.

cut‐off

1.

2.

CSE

MECH

2011 ‐ 2012

2011 ‐ 2012

174.50

181.00

173.00

-

179.5

0

178.0

156.50

176.75

181.50 160.25 175.00 152.25

187.50174.00 185.50 170.75

108.50

193.16

168.50

148.75

0

3. EEE 2011 ‐ 2012 176.00 165.50 165.2 149.00 182.75 157.25 170.50 152.25 150.75 85.50

5

4. ECE 2011 ‐ 2012 180.75 179.75 174.2 128.75 186.50 175.00 192.3 169.00 150.75 146.25

5. IT 2011 ‐ 2012 165.00 161.25 156.2 122.75 176.50 153.00 151.50 141.25 134.25 91.75

5

6. EI 2011 ‐ 2012 156.75 - 145.7 133.25 161.83 143.25 169.75 85.50 151.50 96.50

7. Prod. 2011 ‐ 2012 - - 106.5 100.05 150.50 116.50 152.091 91.00 - -

8. Aero 2011 ‐ 2012 176.75 161.000 158.0 110.25 165.00 1387 163.00 130.25 167.00 118.00

9. Civil 2011 ‐ 2012 - - 164.5 - 176.00 166.75 185.50 164.75 155.00 136.00

� Display marks scored in Test etc. and in aggregate for all candidates who

were admitted.


XII. APPLICATION FORM

XIII. LIST OF APPLICANTS

� Downloadable application form, www.jjcet.ac.in

List of candidates whose applications have been received along with

percentile/percentage score for each of the qualifying examination in separate

categories for open seats. List of candidates who have applied along with percentage and

percentile score for Management quota seats.

ADMISSION UNDER PROCESSING

20


Sl.

No

1

XIV. RESULTS OF ADMISSION UNDER MANAGEMENT SEATS/VACANT SEATS

Selection Process

Committee Members of the selection team for

Admission

2 Selection Process

21

Chairman

Principal

Finance officer

Score of the individual

candidates admitted arranged

in order of merit

3 List of Candidates

Waiting List of the candidates in order of merit to

Admission under process

4 be operative from the last date of joining of the

first list candidates

List of the candidates who joined within the date,

Admission under process

5 vacancy position in each category before

operation of waiting list

Admission under process

XV. INFORMATION ON INFRASTRUCTURE AND OTHER RESOURCES

AVAILABLE

LIBRARY:

¾ Number of Library books/Titles/Journals available (programme‐wise)

¾ List of online National/International Journals subscribed.

¾ E‐Library facilities

Library for the Existing Programme.

S. No. Particulars Availability

1. No. of Titles of the books (*) 12286

2. No. of Volumes of the books (*) 37540

3. No. of Journals

National 91

International 505 (E-Journal)

4. Seating Capacity Ground Floor : 120 + First Floor 60

5. Reprographic Facility Xerox Available


3. Details of the Library facilities

S.NO Course(s)

Number of titles

of the books

22

Number of volumes

Number of Journals

Required Available Required Available National International

Required Available Required Available

01. CSE & IT 3668 7430 08 40

02. E.E.E & E&I 905 7298 07 42

03. ECE 1680 5852 05 23

04. MECH. & PRODN. 2114 6615 15 93

05. CIVIL 316 1745 10 10

06. AERONAUTICAL 181 431 04 -

07. GENERAL 590 740 05 157

08. PHYSICS 569 1440 06 18

09. CHEMISTRY 400 971 07 19

10. MATHS 1292 3018 05 73

11. ENGLISH 521 1026 - -

12 M.E. (PE&D) 74 225 05 -

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2018
Item No. 4.53

UNIVERSITY OF MUMBAI

Revised syllabus (Rev- 2016) from Academic Year 2016 -17


Under

FACULTY OF TECHNOLOGY

Electronics and Telecommunication


Engineering
Third Year with Effect from AY 2018-19
Final Year with Effect from AY 2019-20

As per Choice Based Credit and Grading System


with effect from the AY 2016–17
Dean, Faculty of Science and Technology

Preamble:

To meet the challenge of ensuring excellence in engineering education, the issue of quality needs to be
addressed, debated and taken forward in a systematic manner. Accreditation is the principal means of quality
assurance in higher education. The major emphasis of accreditation process is to measure the outcomes of the
program that is being accredited. In line with this Faculty of Technology of University of Mumbai has taken a
lead in incorporating philosophy of outcome-based education in the process of curriculum development.
Faculty of Technology, University of Mumbai, in one of its meeting unanimously resolved that, each Board of
Studies shall prepare some Program Educational Objectives (PEOs) and give freedom to affiliated Institutes
to add few (PEOs). It is also resolved that course objectives and course outcomes are to be clearly defined for
each course, so that all faculty members in affiliated institutes understand the depth and approach of course to
be taught, which will enhance learner’s learning process. It was also resolved that, maximum senior faculty
from colleges and experts from industry to be involved while revising the curriculum. I am happy to state that,
each Board of studies has adhered to the resolutions passed by Faculty of Technology and developed
curriculum accordingly. In addition to outcome-based education, semester-based credit and grading system is
also introduced to ensure quality of engineering education. Choice based Credit and Grading system enables a
much-required shift in focus from teacher-centric to learner centric education since the workload estimated is
based on the investment of time in learning and not in teaching. It also focuses on continuous evaluation which
will enhance the quality of education. University of Mumbai has taken a lead in implementing the system
through its affiliated Institutes and Faculty of Technology has devised a transparent credit assignment policy
and adopted ten points scales to grade learner’s performance. Credit assignment for courses is based on 15
weeks teaching learning process, however content of courses is to be taught in 12-13 weeks and remaining 2-
3 weeks to be utilized for revision, guest lectures, coverage of content beyond syllabus etc. Choice based Credit
and grading system is implemented from the academic year 2016-17 through optional courses at department
and institute level. This will be effective for SE, TE and BE from academic year 2017- 18, 2018-19 and 2019-
20 respectively.

Dr. S. K. Ukarande
Dean (I/c) Faculty of Science and Technology,
Member - Academic Council,
University of Mumbai, Mumbai

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 2


Chairman’s Preamble:

The curriculum in higher education is a living entity. It evolves with time; it reflects the ever changing needs
of the society and keeps pace with the growing talent of the students and the faculty. The engineering education
in India is expanding in manifolds and the main challenge is the quality of education. All stakeholders are very
much concerned about it. The curriculum of Electronics & Telecommunication in Mumbai University is no
exception. In keeping with the demands of the changing times, it contains innovative features. The exposure
to the latest technology and tools used all over the world is given by properly selecting the subjects. It is
designed in such a way to incorporate the requirements of various industries. The major emphasis of this
process is to measure the outcomes of the program. Program outcomes are essentially a range of skills and
knowledge that a student will have at the time of post-graduation. So the curriculum must be refined and
updated to ensure that the defined objectives and outcomes are achieved.
I, as Chairman Ad-hoc Board of Studies in Electronics and Telecommunication Engineering, University of
Mumbai, happy to state here that, the heads of the department and senior faculty from various institutes took
timely and valuable initiative to frame the Program Educational objectives as listed below.
Objectives:

 To produce Electronics & Telecommunication engineers, having strong theoretical foundation, good
design experience and exposure to research and development.

 To produce researcher who have clear thinking, articulation and interest to carry out theoretical and/or
applied research resulting in significant advancement in the field of specialization.

 To develop an ability to identify, formulate and solve electronics and telecommunication engineering
problems in the latest technology.

 To develop the ability among students to synthesize data and technical concepts from applications to
product design.
These are the suggested and expected main objectives, individual affiliated institutes may add further in the
list. I believe that the small step taken in the right direction will definitely help in providing quality education
to the stake holders.
This book of curricula is the culmination of large number of faculty members and supporting staff. It also
reflects the creative contribution of hundreds of teachers – both serving and retired. I sincerely hope that the
faculty and students of Electronics and Telecommunication in Mumbai University will take full advantage of
dynamic features of curriculum and make teaching-learning process a truly sublime experience for all.
At the end I must extend my gratitude to all experts and colleagues who contributed to make curriculum
competent at par with latest technological development in the field of Electronics & Telecommunication
Engineering.

Dr. Uttam D. Kolekar


Chairman, Ad-hoc Board of Studies in Electronics and Telecommunication Engineering

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 3


Program Structure for
B.E. Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering (Rev. 2016)
University of Mumbai (With Effect from 2017-2018)
Semester V
Teaching Scheme (Contact
Course Credits Assigned
Course Name Hours)
Code
Theory Pracs Tut Theory TW/ Pracs Total
Microprocessor &
ECC501 4 - - 4 - 4
Peripherals Interfacing
ECC502 Digital Communication 4 - - 4 - 4
ECC503 Electromagnetic Engineering 4 - 1@ 4 1 5
Discrete Time Signal
ECC504 4 - - 4 - 4
Processing
ECCDLO Department Level Optional
4 - - 4 - 4
501X Course I
Microprocessor &
ECL501 - 2 - - 1 1
Peripherals Interfacing Lab
ECL502 Digital Communication Lab - 2 - - 1 1
Business Communication &
ECL503 - 2+2* - - 2 2
Ethics Lab
Open Source Technology for
ECL504 - 2 - - 1 1
Communication Lab
ECLDLO Department Level Optional
- - 2# - 1 1
501X Lab I
Total 20 10 3 20 7 27
@ 1 hour to be taken as tutorial classwise #2 hours to be taken as either lab or tutorial based on subject requirement
*2 hours to be taken as tutorial batchwise

Examination Scheme
Theory
Course Exam Oral/ Total
Internal Assessment End Sem TW
Code Course Name Duration Prac
Exam
Test1 Test 2 Avg (Hrs)
Microprocessor &
ECC501 20 20 20 80 03 -- -- 100
Peripherals Interfacing
ECC502 Digital Communication 20 20 20 80 03 -- -- 100
Electromagnetic
20 20 20 80 03 25 -- 125
ECC503 Engineering
Discrete Time Signal
ECC504 20 20 20 80 03 -- -- 100
Processing
ECCDLO Department Level Optional
20 20 20 80 03 -- -- 100
501X Course I
Microprocessor &
ECL501 -- -- -- -- -- 25 25 50
Peripherals Interfacing Lab
ECL502 Digital Communication Lab -- -- -- -- -- 25 25 50
Business Communication &
ECL503 -- -- -- -- -- 50 -- 50
Ethics Lab
Open Source Technology
ECL504 -- -- -- -- -- 25 25 50
for Communication Lab
ECLDLO Department Level Optional
-- -- -- -- -- 25 -- 25
501X Lab I
Total 100 400 175 75 750
University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 4
University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 5
Course Code Department Level Optional Course I

ECCDLO 5011 Microelectronics

ECCDLO 5012 TV & Video Engineering

ECCDLO 5013 Finite Automata Theory

ECCDLO 5014 Data Compression and Encryption

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 6


Semester VI

Teaching Scheme
Course Credits Assigned
Course Name (Contact Hours)
Code
Theory Pracs Tut Theory TW/ Pracs Total
Microcontrollers &
ECC601 4 - -- 4 -- 4
Applications
Computer Communication
ECC602 4 - - 4 - 4
Networks
Antenna & Radio Wave
ECC603 4 - - 4 - 4
Propagation
Image Processing and Machine
ECC604 4 - -- 4 -- 4
Vision
ECCDLO Department Level Optional
4 - - 4 - 4
602X Course II
Microcontroller &
ECL601 - 2 - - 1 1
Applications Lab
Computer Communication
ECL602 - 2 - - 1 1
Network Lab
Antenna & Radio Wave
ECL603 - 2 - - 1 1
Propagation Lab
Image Processing and Machine
ECL604 - 2 - - 1 1
Vision Lab
ECLDLO Department Level Optional
- 2 - - 1 1
602X Lab II
Total 20 10 - 20 5 25

Examination Scheme
Theory
Course
Course Name Internal Assessment End Exam Oral &
Code TW Total
Sem Duration Prac
Test1 Test 2 Avg Exam (Hrs)
ECC601 Microcontroller& Applications 20 20 20 80 03 -- -- 100
Computer Communication
ECC602 20 20 20 80 03 -- -- 100
Network
Antenna & Radio Wave
ECC603 20 20 20 80 03 -- -- 100
Propagation
Image Processing and Machine
ECC604 20 20 20 80 03 -- -- 100
Vision Lab
ECCDLO Department Level Optional
20 20 20 80 03 -- -- 100
602X Course II
Microcontroller & Applications
ECL601 -- -- -- -- -- 25 25 50
Lab
Computer Communication
ECL602 -- -- -- -- -- 25 25 50
Network Lab
Antenna & Radio Wave
ECL603 -- -- -- -- -- 25 25 50
Propagation Lab
Image Processing and Machine
ECL604 -- -- -- -- -- 25 25 50
Vision Lab
ECLDLO Department Level Optional Lab
-- -- -- -- -- 25 -- 25
602X II
Total 100 400 125 100 725

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 7


University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 8
Course Code Department Level Optional Course II

ECCDLO 6021 Digital VLSI Design

ECCDLO 6022 Radar Engineering

ECCDLO 6023 Database Management System

ECCDLO 6024 Audio Processing

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 9


Semester VII
Teaching Scheme (Contact
Course Credits Assigned
Course Name Hours)
Code
Theory Pracs Tut Theory TW/ Pracs Total
ECC701 Microwave Engineering 4 - - 4 - 4
Mobile Communication
ECC702 4 - - 4 - 4
System
ECC703 Optical Communication 4 - -- 4 - 4
ECCDLO Department Level Optional
4 - - 4 - 4
703X Course III
Institute Level Optional
ILO701X 3 - - 3 - 3
Course I
ECL701 Microwave Engineering Lab - 2 - - 1 1
Mobile Communication
ECL702 - 2 - - 1 1
System Lab
ECL703 Optical Communication Lab - 2 - - 1 1
ECLDLO Department Level Optional
- 2 - - 1 1
703X Lab III
ECL704 Project-I - 6 - - 3 3
Total 19 14 - 19 7 26

Examination Scheme
Theory
Course
Course Name Internal Assessment End Exam Oral &
Code TW Total
Sem Duration Prac
Test1 Test 2 Avg Exam (Hrs)
ECC701 Microwave Engineering 20 20 20 80 03 -- -- 100
ECC702 Mobile Communication System 20 20 20 80 03 -- -- 100
ECC703 Optical Communication 20 20 20 80 03 -- -- 100
ECCDLO Department Level Optional
20 20 20 80 03 -- -- 100
703X Course III
ILO701X Institute Level Optional Course I 20 20 20 80 03 -- -- 100
ECL701 Microwave Engineering Lab -- -- -- -- -- 25 25 50
Mobile Communication System
ECL702 -- -- -- -- -- 25 25 50
Lab
ECL703 Optical Communication Lab -- -- -- -- -- 25 25 50
ECLDLO Department Level Optional Lab
-- -- -- -- -- 25 25 50
703X III
ECL704 Project-I -- -- -- -- -- 50 50 100
Total 100 400 150 150 800

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 10


Course Code Department Level Optional Course III Course Code Institute Level Optional Course I#

ECCDLO7031 Neural Networks and Fuzzy Logic ILO7011 Product Lifecycle Management

ECCDLO7032 Big Data Analytics ILO7012 Reliability Engineering

ECCDLO7033 Internet Communication Engineering ILO7013 Management Information System

ECCDLO7034 CMOS Mixed Signal VLSI ILO7014 Design of Experiments

ECCDLO7035 Embedded System ILO7015 Operation Research

ILO7016 Cyber Security and Laws

ILO7017 Disaster Management and Mitigation


Measures

ILO7018 Energy Audit and Management

ILO7019 Development Engineering

# Common with all branches

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 11


Semester VIII

Teaching Scheme
Course Credits Assigned
Course Name (Contact Hours)
Code
Theory Pracs Tut Theory TW/ Pracs Total
ECC801 RF Design 4 - -- 4 -- 4
ECC802 Wireless Networks 4 - - 4 - 4
ECCDLO Department Level Optional
4 - - 4 - 4
804X Course IV
Institute Level Optional
ILO802X 3 - - 3 - 3
Course II
ECL801 RF Design Lab - 2 - - 1 1
ECL802 Wireless Networks Lab - 2 - - 1 1
ECLDLO Department Level Optional
- 2 - - 1 1
804X Lab IV
ECL803 Project-II - 12 - - 6 6
Total 15 18 - 15 9 24

Examination Scheme
Theory
Course
Course Name Internal Assessment End Exam Oral &
Code TW Total
Sem Duration Prac
Test1 Test 2 Avg Exam (Hrs)
ECC801 RF Design 20 20 20 80 03 -- -- 100
ECC802 Wireless Networks 20 20 20 80 03 -- -- 100
ECCDLO Department Level Optional
20 20 20 80 03 -- -- 100
804X Course IV
Institute Level Optional Course
ILO802X 20 20 20 80 03 -- -- 100
II
ECL801 RF Design Lab -- -- -- -- -- 25 25 50
ECL802 Wireless Networks Lab -- -- -- -- -- 25 25 50
ECLDLO Department Level Optional Lab
-- -- -- -- -- 25 25 50
804X IV
ECL803 Project-II -- -- -- -- -- 100 50 150
Total 80 320 175 125 700

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 12


Course Code Department Level Elective Course IV Course Code Institute Level Elective Course II#

ECCDLO8041 Optical Networks ILO8021 Project Management

ECCDLO8042 Advanced Digital Signal Processing ILO8022 Finance Management

Entrepreneurship Development and


ECCDLO8043 ILO8023
Satellite Communication Management

ECCDLO8044 Network management in Telecommunication ILO8024 Human Resource Management

ILO8025 Professional Ethics and CSR

ILO8026 Research Methodology

ILO8027 IPR and Patenting

ILO8028 Digital Business Management

ILO8029 Environmental Management

# Common with all branches

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 13


Subject Subject Teaching Scheme Credits Assigned
Code Name (Hrs.)
Theory Practical Tutorial Theory Practical Tutorial Total
ECC501 Microproces 04 -- -- 04 -- -- 04
sors &
Peripherals

Examination Scheme
Theory Marks
Subject Subject
Name Internal assessment Term Practical Oral
Code Work & Oral Total
Avg. Of Test End Sem.
Test 1 Test2 1 and Test 2 Exam
ECC501 Microproces 20 20 20 80 -- -- -- 100
sors &
Peripherals

Course prerequisite:
 Digital System Design

Course objectives:
 To understand the basic concepts of microcomputer systems.
 To develop background knowledge and core expertise in 8086 microprocessor and co-processor 8087.
 To write assembly language programs for 8086 microprocessor
 To understand peripheral devices and their interfacing to 8086 and to study the design aspects of basic
microprocessor based system.

Course outcomes:

After successful completion of the course student will be able to


 Understand the basic concepts of microcomputer systems.
 Understand the architecture and software aspects of microprocessor 8086.
 Write Assembly language program in 8086.
 Know the Co-processor configurations.
 Interface peripherals for 8086.
 Design elementary aspect of microprocessor based system.

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 14


Module Unit Topics Hrs.
No. No.
1.0 Introduction to Microcomputer System 06
1.1 Block diagram of microprocessor based system: CPU, I/O Devices,
Clock, Memory, Concept of Address, Data and Control Bus and
Tristate logic.
1.2 Need of Assembly Language and its Comparison with higher level
languages
1.3 Need of Assembler and Compiler and their comparison.
2.0 Architecture of 8086 Microprocessor 06
2.2 8086 Architecture and organization, pin configuration.
2.3 Minimum and Maximum modes of 8086.
2.4 Read and Write bus cycle of 8086.
3.0 Instruction set and programming of 8086 10
3.1 8086 Addressing modes.
3.2 8086 Instruction encoding formats and instruction set.
3.3 Assembler directives.
3.4 8086 programming and debugging of assembly language program.
Programs related to: arithmetic, logical, delay, string manipulation,
stack and subroutines, input, output, timer/counters.
3.5 Elementary DOS Programming: Introduction to int-21h services.
4.0 Peripherals interfacing with 8086 and applications. 10
4.1 8086-Interrupt structure.
4.2 Programmable peripheral Interface 8255.
4.3 Programmable interval Timer 8254.
4.4 Elementary features of 8259A and 8257 and interface.
4.5 Interfacing 8255, 8254 with 8086 and their applications
5.0 ADC, DAC interfacing with 8086 and its application 08
5.1 Analog to Digital Converter (ADC) 0809
5.2 Digital to Analog Converter (DAC) 0808
5.3 Interfacing ADC 0809, DAC 0808 with 8086 and their
applications.
5.4 8086 based data Acquisition system.
6.0 8086 Microprocessor interfacing 08
6.1 8087 Math co-processor, its data types and interfacing with
8086.
6.2 Memory interfacing with 8086 microprocessor
Total 48

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 15


Text Books:

1. John Uffenbeck: “8086/8088 family: “Design, Programming and Interfacing”, Prentice Hall, 2nd
Edition
2. B. B. Brey: “The Intel Microprocessors 8086/8088, 80186/80188, 80286, 80386, 80486, Pentium
and Pentium Pro Processor”, Pearson Pub, 8th Edition
3. Hall D.V: “Microprocessor and Interfacing Programming and Hardware”, Tata McGraw Hill, 2nd
Edition.
4. Yu-Cheng Liu/Glenn A. Gibson: “Microcomputer Systems: The 8086/8088 Family Architecture,
Programming and Design”, Phi Learning.

Reference Books:
1. Peter Abel: “IBM PC ASSEMBLY LANGUAGE & PROGRAMMING”, Phi Learning.
2. A. K. Ray and K. M. Burchandi: “Advanced Microprocessor and Peripherals, Architecture
Programming and Interfacing”, Tata McGrawHill, 3rd Edition
3. Don Anderson, Tom Shanley: “Pentium Processor System Architecture”, MindShare Inc., 2 nd
Edition
4. National Semiconductor: Data Acquisition Linear Devices Data Book
5. Intel Peripheral Devices: Data Book.
6. The Intel 8086 family user manual.

Internal Assessment:
Assessment consists of two class tests of 20 marks each. The first class test is to be conducted when
approximately 40% syllabus is completed and second class test when additional 40% syllabus is
completed. The average marks of both the test will be considered for final Internal Assessment.
Duration of each test shall be of one hour.

End Semester Examination:


1. Question paper will comprise of 6 questions, each carrying 20 marks.
2. The students need to solve total 4 questions.
3. Question No.1 will be compulsory and based on entire syllabus.
4. Remaining question (Q.2 to Q.6) will be selected from all the modules.

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 16


Subject Subject Teaching Scheme Credits Assigned
Code Name (Hrs.)
Theory Practical Tutorial Theory Practical Tutorial Total
ECC50 Digital 04 -- -- 04 -- -- 04
2 Communicat
ion

Examination Scheme
Theory Marks
Subject Subject
Name Internal assessment Term Practical Oral
Code Work & Oral Total
Avg. Of Test End Sem.
Test 1 Test2 1 and Test 2 Exam
ECC50 Digital 20 20 20 80 -- -- -- 100
2 Communica
tion

Prerequisites:
 Analog Communication

Course objectives:
 To identify the signals and functions of its different components,
 To learn about theoretical aspects of digital communication system and Draw signal space diagrams,
compute spectra of modulated signals,
 To learn about error detection and correction to produce optimum receiver.

Course outcomes:

After successful completion of the course student will be able to


 Understand random variables and random processes of signal,
 Apply the concepts of Information Theory in source coding,
 Evaluate different methods to eliminate Inter-symbol interference,
 Compare different band-pass modulation techniques,
 Evaluate performance of different error control codes.

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 17


Module Unit Topics Hrs.
No. No.
1.0 Probability Theory & Random Variables 08
1.1 Information, Probability, Conditional Probability of
independent events, Relation between probability and
probability Density , Raleigh Probability Density , CDF, PDF.
1.2 Random Variables, Variance of a Random Variable, correlation
between Random Variables, Statistical Averages(Means),Mean
and Variance of sum of Random variables, Linear mean square
Estimation, Central limit theorem, Error function and
Complementary error function Discrete and Continuous
Variable, Gaussian PDF, Threshold Detection, Statistical
Average, Chebyshev In-Equality, Auto-correction.

1.3 Random Processes


2.0 Information Theory and Source Coding 06
2.1 Block diagram and sub-system description of a digital
communication system, measure of information and properties,
entropy and it’s properties
2.2 Mini Source Coding, Shannon’s Source Coding Theorem,
Shannon-Fano Source Coding, Huffman Source Coding
2.3 Differential Entropy, joint and conditional entropy, mutual
information and channel capacity, channel coding theorem,
channel capacity theorem
3.0 Error Control Systems 12
3.1 Types of error control, error control codes, linear block codes,
systematic linear block codes, generator matrix, parity check
matrix, syndrome testing ,error correction, and decoder
implementation
3.2 Systematic and Non-systematic Cyclic codes: encoding with
shift register and error detection and correction
3.3 Convolution Codes: Time domain and transform domain
approach, graphical representation, code tree, trellis, state
diagram, decoding methods.
4.0 Bandpass Modulation & Demodulation 10
4.1 Band-pass digital transmitter and receiver model, digital
modulation schemes
4.2 Generation, detection, signal space diagram, spectrum,
bandwidth efficiency, and probability of error analysis of:
Amplitude Shift Keying (ASK), Frequency Shift Keying
(FSK)Modulations, Binary Phase Shift Keying (BPSK)
Modulation, Quaternary Phase Shift Keying QPSK), M- ary
PSK Modulations, Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (QAM),
Minimum Shift Keying (MSK)
University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 18
5.0 Baseband Modulation & Transmission 04
5.1 Discrete PAM signals and it’s power spectra
5.2 Inter-symbol interference, Nyquist criterion for zero ISI,
sinusoidal roll-off filtering, correlative coding, equalizers, and
eye pattern
6.0 Optimum Reception of Digital Signal 08
6.1 Baseband receiver
6.2 Probability of Error
6.3 Optimum Receiver and Filter
6.4 Matched Filter and its probability of error
6.5 Coherent Reception
Total 48
Text Books: oooloooooot
alotalotal
1. H. Taub, D. Schlling, and G. Saha, “Principles of Communication Systems,” Tata Mc- Graw Hill,
New Delhi, Third Edition, 2012.
2. Lathi B P, and Ding Z., “Modern Digital and Analog Communication Systems,” Oxford University
Press, Fourth Edition, 2009.
3. Haykin Simon, “Digital Communication Systems,” John Wiley and Sons, New Delhi, Fourth
Edition, 2014.

Reference Books:
1. Sklar B, and Ray P. K., “Digital Communication: Fundamentals and applications,” Pearson,
Dorling Kindersley (India), Delhi, Second Edition, 2009.
2. T L Singal, “Analog and Digital Communication,” Tata Mc-Graw Hill, New Delhi, First Edition,
2012.
3. P Ramakrishna Rao, “Digital Communication,” Tata Mc-Graw Hill, New Delhi, First Edition,
2011.
4. M F Mesiya, “Contempory Communication systems”, Mc-Graw Hill, Singapore, First Edition,
2013.
Internal Assessment:
Assessment consists of two class tests of 20 marks each. The first class test is to be conducted when
approximately 40% syllabus is completed and second class test when additional 40% syllabus is
completed. The average marks of both the test will be considered for final Internal Assessment.
Duration of each test shall be of one hour.

End Semester Examination:


1. Question paper will comprise of 6 questions, each carrying 20 marks.
2. The students need to solve total 4 questions.
3. Question No.1 will be compulsory and based on entire syllabus.
4. Remaining question (Q.2 to Q.6) will be selected from all the modules.

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 19


Subject Subject Teaching Scheme Credits Assigned
Code Name (Hrs.)
Theory Practical Tutorial Theory Practical Tutorial Total
ECC503 Electromagn 04 -- @1 04 -- 01 05
etic
Engineering

Examination Scheme
Theory Marks
Subject Subject
Name Internal assessment Term Practical Oral
Code Work & Oral Total
Avg. Of Test End Sem.
Test 1 Test2 1 and Test 2 Exam
ECC503 Electromagn 20 20 20 80 25 -- -- 125
etic
Engineering

@ 1 hour to be taken as tutorial class wise

Course prerequisite:
 Vector Algebra and vector Calculus
 Various Co-ordinate system
 Two port network

Course objectives:
 To learn electromagnetics, including static and dynamic electromagnetic fields and waves within
and at the boundaries of media.
 To learn mathematical skills, including Vectors and phasors and Partial differential equations.
 To learn Electromagnetic radiation and propagation in space and within
transmission lines

Course outcomes:
After successful completion of the course student will be able to explain and evaluate EM fields and key
physical parameters for:
 Fields and energies in simple planar, cylindrical, and spherical geometries, Fields within
conducting and anisotropic media
 Electric and magnetic forces on charges, wires, and media Sinusoids and transients on TEM lines
with mismatched impedances and tuning

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 20


Module Unit Topics Hrs.
No. No.
1.0 Electrostatics 07
1.1 Coulomb’s Law & Electric Field Intensity, Electric Field due to point
charge, line charge and surface charge distributions
1.2 Electric Flux Density, Gauss’s Law and its Application to differential
volume element, divergence, divergence theorem.
1.3 Electric potential, Relationship between Electric field & potential ,
Potential Gradient., electric dipole
2.0 Electric Fields in Material Space 06
2.1 Energy density in electrostatic field, Current and current Density,
continuity equation, Polarization in dielectrics
2.2 Capacitance, capacitance of parallel plate; spherical; cylindrical
capacitors with multiple di-electrics, Boundary conditions
2.3 Poisson’s and Laplace's equation, General procedures for solving
Poisson’s and Laplace’s equations.
3.0 Steady Magnetic Field 07
3.1 Biot-Savart’s Law, Ampere’s Circuital Law and its Applications,
magnetic flux density, Magnetic Scalar and vectors potentials,
Derivations of Biot-Savart’s law and Ampere’s law based on
Magnetic Potential
3.2 Forces due to magnetic field, magnetic dipole, Classification of
Magnetic Materials, Magnetic boundary conditions.
4.0 Maxwell’s Equation and Electromagnetic Wave Propagation 12
4.1 Faraday’s law, Displacement current, Maxwell’s equations in point
form and integral form, Boundary conditions for time varying field
, magnetic vector potential, Time harmonic field, Introduction to the
concept of Uniform Plane Wave and Helmholtz equation.
4.2 Wave Propagation in Free Space, Lossy and Lossless Dielectrics
and in Good Conductors. Reflection of Plane Wave, Poynting
Vector, Wave Power, Skin Effect, Wave Polarization and Standing
Wave Ratio
5.0 Transmission Lines 10
5.1 Transmission line parameters, Transmission line equations, Input
impedance, Standing wave ratio, Power, Transients on transmission
lines.
5.2 Smith Chart, Applications of Smith Chart in finding VSWR ,and
reflection coefficient, admittance calculations, impedance
calculations over length of line.

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 21


6.0 Applications of Electromagnetics 06
6.1 Electrostatic discharge, Materials with high dielectric constant,
Graphene, Inkjet printer, RF mems, Multidielectric systems,
magnetic levitation, Memristor, Optical nanocircuits,
Metamaterials, Microstrip lines and characterization of Data cables,
RFID
Total 48

Text Books:
1. Engineering Electromagnetics, William H Hayt and John A Buck - Tata McGraw-Hill Publishing
Company Limited, Seventh Edition
2. Principles of Electromagnetics, Matthew N. O.Sadiku ,S.V.Kulkarni- Oxford university press,
Sixth edition

Reference Books:
1. Electromagnetics with applications by J.D.Krauss and Daniel Fleisch fifth edition
2. Electromagnetic Field Theory Fundamentals, Bhag Singh Guru, Hüseyin R. Hiziroglu Cambridge
University Press, Second Edition.
3. Electromagnetics, Joseph Edminister, , Mahmood Nahvi, Schaum Outline Series, Fourth edition.
4. R. K. Shevgaonkar, “Electromagnetic Waves” Tata McGraw Hil

Internal Assessment:
Assessment consists of two class tests of 20 marks each. The first class test is to be conducted when
approximately 40% syllabus is completed and second class test when additional 40% syllabus is
completed. The average marks of both the test will be considered for final Internal Assessment.
Duration of each test shall be of one hour.

End Semester Examination:


1. Question paper will comprise of 6 questions, each carrying 20 marks.
2. The students need to solve total 4 questions.
3. Question No.1 will be compulsory and based on entire syllabus.
4. Remaining question (Q.2 to Q.6) will be selected from all the modules.

Note: Term Work should be based on Tutorials.

Note: Term Work should be based on Tutorials.

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 22


Subject Subject Teaching Scheme Credits Assigned
Code Name (Hrs.)
Theory Practical Tutorial Theory Practical Tutorial Total
ECC504 Discrete Time 04 -- -- 04 -- -- 04
Signal
Processing

Examination Scheme
Theory Marks
Subject Subject
Name Internal assessment Term Practical Oral
Code Work & Oral Total
Avg. Of Test End Sem.
Test 1 Test2 1 and Test 2 Exam
ECC504 Discrete Time 20 20 20 80 -- -- -- 100
Signal
Processing

Course prerequisite:
 Signals & Systems

Course objectives:
 To develop a thorough understanding of DFT and FFT and their applications.
 To teach the design techniques and performance analysis of digital filters
 To introduce the students to digital signal processors and its applications.

Course outcomes:
After successful completion of the course student will be able to
 Understand the concepts of discrete-time Fourier transform and fast Fourier transform.
 Apply the knowledge of design of IIR digital filters to meet arbitrary specifications.
 Apply the knowledge of design of FIR digital filters to meet arbitrary specifications.
 Analyze the effect of hardware limitations on performance of digital filters.
 Apply the knowledge of DSP processors for various applications.

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 23


Module Unit Topics Hrs.
No. No.
1.0 Discrete Fourier Transform & Fast Fourier Transform 10
1.1 Definition and Properties of DFT, IDFT, Circular convolution of
sequences using DFT and IDFT.
Filtering of long data sequences: Overlap-Save and Overlap-Add
Method for computation of DFT
1.2 Fast Fourier Transforms (FFT), Radix-2 decimation in time and
decimation in frequency FFT algorithms, inverse FFT, and
introduction to composite FFT.
2.0 IIR Digital Filters 10
2.1 Types of IIR Filters (Low Pass, High Pass, Band Pass, Band Stop
and All Pass), Analog filter approximations: Butterworth,
Chebyshev I, Elliptic.
2.2 Mapping of S-plane to Z-plane, impulse invariance method,
bilinear transformation method, Design of IIR digital filters
(Butterworth and Chebyshev-I) from Analog filters with examples.

2.3 Analog and digital frequency transformations with design examples.

3.0 FIR Digital Filters 10


3.1 Characteristics of FIR digital filters, Minimum Phase, Maximum
Phase, Mixed Phase and Linear Phase Filters.
Frequency response, location of the zeros of linear phase FIR filters.

3.2 Design of FIR filters using Window techniques (Rectangular,


Hamming, Hanning, Blackmann, Kaiser), Design of FIR filters
using Frequency Sampling technique, Comparison of IIR and FIR
filters.
4.0 Finite Word Length effects in Digital Filters 06

4.1 Quantization, truncation and rounding, Effects due to truncation and


rounding, Input quantization error, Product quantization error, Co-
efficient quantization error, Zero-input limit cycle oscillations,
Overflow limit cycle oscillations, Scaling.
4.2 Quantization in Floating Point realization of IIR digital filters, Finite
word length effects in FIR digital filters.
5.0 DSP Processors 06
5.1 Introduction to General Purpose and Special Purpose DSP processors,
fixed point and floating point DSP processor, Computer architecture
for signal processing, Harvard Architecture, Pipelining, multiplier and
accumulator (MAC), Special Instructions, Replication, On-chip
memory, Extended Parallelism.

University of Mumbai, B. E. (Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 24


5.2 General purpose digital signal processors, Selecting digital signal
processors, Special purpose DSP hardware, Architecture of
TMS320CX fixed and floating DSP processors.
6.0 Applications of Digital Signal Processing 06
6.1 Application of DSP for ECG signals analysis.
6.2 Application of DSP for Dual Tone Multi Frequency signal detection.

6.3 Application of DSP for Radar Signal Processing.


Total 48

Text Books:
1. Emmanuel C. Ifeachor, Barrie W. Jervis, “Digital Signal Processing”, A Practical Approach
by, Pearson Education
2. Tarun Kumar Rawat, “ Digital Signal Processing”, Oxford University Press, 2015

Reference Books:
1. Proakis J., Manolakis D., "Digital Signal Processing", 4th Edition, Pearson Education.
2. Sanjit K. Mitra , Digital Signal Processing – A Computer Based Approach – 4th Edition
McGraw Hill Education (India) Private Limited.
3. Oppenheim A., Schafer R., Buck J., "Discrete Time Signal Processing", 2nd Edition, Pearson
Education.
4. B. Venkata Ramani and M. Bhaskar, “Digital Signal Processors, Architecture, Programming
and Applications”, Tata McGraw Hill, 2004.
5. L. R. Rabiner and B. Gold, “Theory and Applications of Digital Signal Processing”, Prentice-
Hall of India, 2006.

Internal Assessment:
Assessment consists of two class tests of 20 marks each. The first class test is to be conducted when
approximately 40% syllabus is completed and second class test when additional 40% syllabus is
completed. The average marks of both the test will be considered for final Internal Assessment.
Duration of each test shall be of one hour.

End Semester Examination:


1. Question paper will comprise of 6 questions, each carrying 20 marks.
2. The students need to solve total 4 questions.
3. Question No.1 will be compulsory and based on entire syllabus.
4. Remaining question (Q.2 to Q.6) will be selected from all the modules.

Note: Term Work


University shouldB.be
of Mumbai, E.based on Tutorials.
(Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering), Rev 2016 25
Subject Subject Teaching Scheme Credits Assigned
Code Name (Hrs.)
Theory Practical Tutorial Theory Practical Tutorial Total
ECCDLO Microelectron 04 -- -- 04 -- -- 04
5011 ics
Источник: [https://torrent-igruha.org/3551-portal.html]
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