<p>As the technology of Supercomputing processes, methodologies for approaching problems have also been developed. The main object of this symposium was the interdisciplinary participation of experts in related fields and passionate discussion to work toward the solution of problems. An executive co
Supercomputer Architecture
β Scribed by Paul B. Schneck (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1987
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 205
- Series
- The Kluwer International Series in Engineering and Computer Science 31
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Supercomputers are the largest and fastest computers available at any point in time. The term was used for the first time in the New York World, March 1920, to describe "new statistical machines with the mental power of 100 skilled mathematicians in solving even highly complex algebraic problems. " Invented by Mendenhall and Warren, these machines were used at Columbia University'S Statistical Bureau. Recently, supercomputers have been used primarily to solve large-scale probΒ lems in science and engineering. Solutions of systems of partial differential equaΒ tions, such as those found in nuclear physics, meteorology, and computational fluid dynamics, account for the majority of supercomputer use today. The early computers, such as EDVAC, SSEC, 701, and UNIVAC, demonstrated the feasibility of building fast electronic computing machines which could become commercial products. The next generation of computers focused on attaining the highest possible computational speeds. This book discusses the architectural approaches used to yield significantly higher computing speeds while preserving the conventional, von Neumann, machine organization (Chapters 2-4). Subsequent improvements depended on developing a new generation of computers employing a new model of computation: single-instruction multipleΒ data (SIMD) processors (Chapters 5-7). Later machines refmed SIMD architecΒ ture and technology (Chapters 8-9). SUPERCOMPUTER ARCHITECI'URE CHAPTER! INTRODUCTION THREE ERAS OF SUPERCOMPUTERS Supercomputers -- the largest and fastest computers available at any point in time -- have been the products of complex interplay among technological, architectural, and algorithmic developments.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xv
Introduction....Pages 1-5
The IBM 7030: Stretch....Pages 7-34
The CDC 6600....Pages 35-51
The IBM 360-91....Pages 53-98
The CDC STAR-100....Pages 99-117
The ILLIAC IV....Pages 119-134
The Cray-1....Pages 135-154
The CYBER 205....Pages 155-164
The Massively Parallel Processor....Pages 165-187
Back Matter....Pages 189-199
β¦ Subjects
Processor Architectures
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
MIMD supercomputers, software, and issues<BR>Parallel Supercomputing in MIMD Architectures is devoted to supercomputing on a wide variety of Multiple-Instruction-Multiple-Data (MIMD)-class parallel machines. The book describes architectural concepts, commercial and research hardware implementations,
Parallel Supercomputing in MIMD Architectures is devoted to supercomputing on a wide variety of Multiple-Instruction-Multiple-Data (MIMD)-class parallel machines. This book describes architectural concepts, commercial and research hardware implementations, major programming concepts, algorithmic met
<B>Contents: </B>A Computer Study on Mach Reflection around a Concave Surface.- Computational Study on Aerodynamic Characteristics of Automobiles.- Use of Multicolor Vectorization of Incomplete LU Preconditioning for the Wilson Fermion on the Lattice.- Supercomputing for Plasma MHD Simulations.- Hig
<div> <p>In 2006, Sony unveiled the long-awaited 'next generation' video-game console, a shiny (albeit heavy) machine whose underlying hardware architecture continues the teachings of the Emotion Engine, that is, focus on vector processing to achieve power, even at the cost of complexity. Meanwhile
This book describes the architecture of the first of a new class of computers, the graphic supercomputer workstation. The authors concentrate on the motivation for defining a new class of computer architectures, as well as on the form of the architecture that responds to the specifications for this