A continuing goal of current multiprocessor software design is to improve the performance and reliability of parallel algorithms. Parallel programming has traditionally been attacked from widely different angles by different groups of people: Hardware designers designing instruction sets, programming language designers designing languages and library interfaces, and theoreticians developing models of parallel computation. Unsurprisingly, this has not always led to consistent results. Newly developing areas show every sign of leading to similar divergence. This Dagstuhl Seminar will bring together researchers and practitioners from all three areas to discuss and reconcile thoughts on these challenges
This report documents the program and the outcomes of Dagstuhl Seminar 16471 "Concurrency with Weak ...
This Dagstuhl Seminar represented a unique opportunity to bring together international experts from ...
Concurrency and parallelism are firm elements of any modern computing infrastructure, made even more...
Two basic technology gaps in today's parallel computers are: 1) too much latency in accessing o...
In this panel discussion from the 2009 Workshop on Computer Architecture Research Directions, David ...
It is now rather easy to build the hardware of a multiprocessor computer, but still quite difficult ...
Parallel software development must face the fact that different architectures require different impl...
It is now rather easy to build the hardware of a multiprocessor computer, but still quite difficult ...
This topic provides a forum for the presentation of the latest research results and practical experi...
In this panel discussion from the 2009 Workshop on Computer Architecture Research Directions, David ...
Parallelism permeates all levels of current computing systems, from single CPU machines to large ser...
The general-purpose computing industry is at a major cross-roads. Power constraints and design compl...
Recently, advances in processor architecture have become the driving force for new programming model...
Despite the processor industry having more or less successfully invested already 10 years to develop...
The evolution of parallel processing over the past several decades can be viewed as the development ...
This report documents the program and the outcomes of Dagstuhl Seminar 16471 "Concurrency with Weak ...
This Dagstuhl Seminar represented a unique opportunity to bring together international experts from ...
Concurrency and parallelism are firm elements of any modern computing infrastructure, made even more...
Two basic technology gaps in today's parallel computers are: 1) too much latency in accessing o...
In this panel discussion from the 2009 Workshop on Computer Architecture Research Directions, David ...
It is now rather easy to build the hardware of a multiprocessor computer, but still quite difficult ...
Parallel software development must face the fact that different architectures require different impl...
It is now rather easy to build the hardware of a multiprocessor computer, but still quite difficult ...
This topic provides a forum for the presentation of the latest research results and practical experi...
In this panel discussion from the 2009 Workshop on Computer Architecture Research Directions, David ...
Parallelism permeates all levels of current computing systems, from single CPU machines to large ser...
The general-purpose computing industry is at a major cross-roads. Power constraints and design compl...
Recently, advances in processor architecture have become the driving force for new programming model...
Despite the processor industry having more or less successfully invested already 10 years to develop...
The evolution of parallel processing over the past several decades can be viewed as the development ...
This report documents the program and the outcomes of Dagstuhl Seminar 16471 "Concurrency with Weak ...
This Dagstuhl Seminar represented a unique opportunity to bring together international experts from ...
Concurrency and parallelism are firm elements of any modern computing infrastructure, made even more...