Parallel Computing: Fundamentals, Applications and New DirectionsE.H. D'Hollander, G.R. Joubert, Frans Peters, Ulrich Trottenberg Elsevier, 1998. gada 22. jūl. - 745 lappuses This volume gives an overview of the state-of-the-art with respect to the development of all types of parallel computers and their application to a wide range of problem areas. The international conference on parallel computing ParCo97 (Parallel Computing 97) was held in Bonn, Germany from 19 to 22 September 1997. The first conference in this biannual series was held in 1983 in Berlin. Further conferences were held in Leiden (The Netherlands), London (UK), Grenoble (France) and Gent (Belgium). From the outset the aim with the ParCo (Parallel Computing) conferences was to promote the application of parallel computers to solve real life problems. In the case of ParCo97 a new milestone was reached in that more than half of the papers and posters presented were concerned with application aspects. This fact reflects the coming of age of parallel computing. Some 200 papers were submitted to the Program Committee by authors from all over the world. The final programme consisted of four invited papers, 71 contributed scientific/industrial papers and 45 posters. In addition a panel discussion on Parallel Computing and the Evolution of Cyberspace was held. During and after the conference all final contributions were refereed. Only those papers and posters accepted during this final screening process are included in this volume. The practical emphasis of the conference was accentuated by an industrial exhibition where companies demonstrated the newest developments in parallel processing equipment and software. Speakers from participating companies presented papers in industrial sessions in which new developments in parallel computing were reported. |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 53.
... Fortran and C++ tools needs to be extended or shifted to Java • One can harness the immense compute power of web clients to perform largescale computation as illustrated by the Javelin system from UCSB [11]. This is very important but ...
... Fortran and C++ to Java. However, putting Java (or more generally CORBA) wrappers around existing code seems to us a good way of preserving old codes. This can both document their capability (through the CORBA trader and Javabean ...
... Fortran 77, Fortran 90, and C++. In our three-tier architecture, this is the use of Java in tier-three engineering and science applications or in the CORBA HPCC vertical facility. We now discuss this controversial area. One of Java's ...
... Fortran by either high-level data parallel HPF or at a lower-level Fortran plus message passing (MPI). Java does not have any built-in parallelism of this type, but at least the lack of pointers means that natural parallelism is less ...
... Fortran as a basic language for large-scale simulation and modeling. Obviously, we should not and cannot port all our codes to Java. Rather, we can start using Java or more precisely Javabeans for wrappers and user interfaces. As ...
Saturs
79 | |
AUTOMATIC PARALLELISATION AND DATA DISTRIBUTION | 225 |
DEBUGGING | 301 |
INDUSTRIAL PERSPECTIVE | 339 |
LANGUAGES | 367 |
NETWORKS AND COMMUNICATION | 401 |
OPERATING SYSTEMS AND THREADS | 467 |
PARALLEL ALGORITHMS | 503 |
PARALLEL PROGRAMMING AND VISUALISATION TOOLS | 623 |
PERFORMANCE | 655 |
SCHEDULING AND LOAD BALANCING | 701 |
Author Index | 743 |
Subject Index | 746 |
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Parallel Computing: Fundamentals, Applications, and New Directions E. D'Hollander Priekšskatījums nav pieejams - 1998 |