Morgan Deters: Seminar Presentations
This page serves as a repository for all the presentations I've given
in front of doctoral seminars at the
Washington University
Department of Computer Science.
If you're looking for something I've presented at one of these
things, you're at the right place.
If you're looking for presentations on my research I've given at the Doctoral Research Seminar, check out my research page.
If you're looking for information related to classes I've taught, check out my programming language seminars page or my courses page.
Links of interest:
Seminar slides available: (most recent first)
- Automatic Detection and Repair of Errors in Data Structures (an OOPSLA 2003 paper by Demsky & Rinard, MIT)
- Pi-Calculus for Fun & Profit
- The Ides of Aspect-Oriented Systems Programming
- Presentation at a
seminar on software systems,
15 March 2004
- This talk is entitled The Ides of Aspect-Oriented Systems
Programming only because it occurred on the
Ides of
March. Naturally, I was very careful not to turn my back
on the audience. Partway into the presentation, I heard a
shot!---but it was just the projector bulb's final, violent
flash of brilliance. The rest of the talk was without
incident.
- Presentation slides available in
[ Gzipped PostScript ]
[ PostScript ]
[ PDF ]
- Memory Management
- The Pi-Calculus (A Crash Course)
- Filesystems Overview: ext2, NTFS, ReiserFS, and the Linux Virtual Filesystem Switch
- Presentation at a
seminar on storage-based supercomputing, 8, 13, & 15 October 2003
- Presentation slides available in
[ Gzipped PostScript ]
[ P
ostScript ]
[ PDF ]
- The Real-Time Specification for Java (RTSJ) Into the Future
- The Tortured History of Real-Time Garbage Collection
- Separation of Concerns Techniques
- Presentation of the
RTLinux Manifesto
- An AspectJ Tutorial
Note: This tutorial is out-of-date for the current version of
AspectJ. Please consult
the official documentation for
the information relevant to the current distribution.
Morgan Deters /
About me /
OpenPGP Public Key /
15 Aug 2005