Multicore: Fallout From a Computing Evolution (LBNL Summer Lecture Series)
Abstract
Summer Lecture Series 2008: Parallel computing used to be reserved for big science and engineering projects, but in two years that's all changed. Even laptops and hand-helds use parallel processors. Unfortunately, the software hasn't kept pace. Kathy Yelick, Director of the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center at Berkeley Lab, describes the resulting chaos and the computing community's efforts to develop exciting applications that take advantage of tens or hundreds of processors on a single chip.
- Authors:
- Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. (LBNL), Berkeley, CA (United States). National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC)
- Publication Date:
- Research Org.:
- Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. (LBNL), Berkeley, CA (United States)
- Sponsoring Org.:
- USDOE Office of Science (SC)
- OSTI Identifier:
- 1009096
- DOE Contract Number:
- AC02-05CH11231
- Resource Type:
- Multimedia
- Resource Relation:
- Conference: Summer Lecture Series, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California (United States), presented on July 22, 2008
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
- Subject:
- 97 MATHEMATICS AND COMPUTING; COMPUTERS; PARALLEL PROCESSING; COMPUTER CODES; PROGRAMMING; MULTICORE PROCESSORS; PARALLESLISM; MEMORY PERFORMANCE; POWER EFFICIENCY; EXASCALE; PARLAB PROJECT; PARALLEL BROWSER
Citation Formats
Yelick, Kathy. Multicore: Fallout From a Computing Evolution (LBNL Summer Lecture Series). United States: N. p., 2008.
Web.
Yelick, Kathy. Multicore: Fallout From a Computing Evolution (LBNL Summer Lecture Series). United States.
Yelick, Kathy. Tue .
"Multicore: Fallout From a Computing Evolution (LBNL Summer Lecture Series)". United States. https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/1009096.
@article{osti_1009096,
title = {Multicore: Fallout From a Computing Evolution (LBNL Summer Lecture Series)},
author = {Yelick, Kathy},
abstractNote = {Summer Lecture Series 2008: Parallel computing used to be reserved for big science and engineering projects, but in two years that's all changed. Even laptops and hand-helds use parallel processors. Unfortunately, the software hasn't kept pace. Kathy Yelick, Director of the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center at Berkeley Lab, describes the resulting chaos and the computing community's efforts to develop exciting applications that take advantage of tens or hundreds of processors on a single chip.},
doi = {},
journal = {},
number = ,
volume = ,
place = {United States},
year = {Tue Jul 22 00:00:00 EDT 2008},
month = {Tue Jul 22 00:00:00 EDT 2008}
}