# Table of Contents for ME 2150 - High Assurance Cyber-Physical Systems ## Files - [[2025-01-09 Syllabus and Introduction.md]] - [[2025-01-14 Microkernels.md]] - [[2025-01-16 HACMS Program Overview.md]] - [[2025-02-18 Boyd Talk.md]] - [[Capabilities Tutorials.md]] - [[Investigating seL4 with Docker.md]] - [[Lean.md]] - [[ME 2150 - High-Assurance Cyber-Physical Systems Homework 1 Complete.md]] - [[ME 2150 - High-Assurance Cyber-Physical Systems Homework 1.md]] - [[press.png]] - [[!Things That Need Done.md]] ## Summary It appears that you have a collection of notes and to-do lists from a course on High Assurance Cyber-Physical Systems (ME 2150) at Carnegie Mellon University. The notes cover various topics, including: 1. A lecture by Jeremy Avigad on Lean, a formal system for reasoning about mathematics. 2. A talk by Boyd Mutlerer on SeL4, Kry10, and the concept of "KOS" (which he doesn't like). 3. To-do lists for completing the course material, including: * Completing the seL4 tutorials * Working through the Microkit tutorial * Reading parts 1-3 of the Microkit tutorial * Attempting to complete parts 2-4 of the Microkit tutorial (status: not started) * Starting an introduction to SeL4 proofs Some notable observations from these notes: * The importance of evidence in science and engineering is emphasized, particularly when it comes to software verification. * The use of formal systems like Lean and SeL4 for reasoning about mathematics and computer systems is highlighted. * The concept of the "innovator's dilemma" is mentioned, which suggests that as technology advances, new challenges and trade-offs emerge. * The value of interactive theorem provers (ITPs) like ITP is discussed. Overall, these notes suggest a focus on formal methods, software verification, and high-assurance systems in the context of computer science and engineering. Generated by llama3.2:latest