High Performance Computing (RISC Architectures, Optimization & Benchmarks)

| Author | : | |
| Rating | : | 4.56 (839 Votes) |
| Asin | : | 156592312X |
| Format Type | : | paperback |
| Number of Pages | : | 466 Pages |
| Publish Date | : | 2017-11-21 |
| Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
"Knowledge of software+hardware makes a complete programmer" according to A Customer. This book provides great insight into the _performance_ of hardware. How can one be a good programmer without knowing how it is that data gets to memory, how data flows through the CPU and what it is in the hardware that makes ones code fast or slow? It amazes me that most of the developers that I. Excellent book on modern computing power Prasanna Meda Explains very nicely and precisely the HW fundamentals of the multiprocessors, memory, RISC, insights in software and optimization concepts like register stacks and nested loops. Very much useful for not to get confused by the buzzwords in the super computer industry. Good book for both the engine. A Customer said very clear explanation of otherwise hard to grip concepts.. Materials covered in certain chapters are equivalent to a one semester class at MIT though in less detail, the lucid explanation of the fundamental concepts are impressive this book is a very good start for someone who has never touched the subject of Parallel Computing before.
His current research is in the area of Internet delivery of educational material. Charles is the co-host of the television show North Coast Digital and was previously the co-host of the television show Nothin but Net.. He has been active in IEEE standards for many years, and he edits a monthly column in the magazine IEEE Comp
Charles is the co-host of the television show North Coast Digital and was previously the co-host of the television show Nothin but Net.. He has been active in IEEE standards for many years, and he edits a monthly column in the magazine IEEE Computer on computer standards. His current research is in the area of Internet delivery of educational material. About the AuthorCharles Severance is the associate director for advanced technology at the University of Michigan Media Union, where he also teaches computer science courses including Introduction to C
The computing power that's available on the average desktop has exploded in the past few years. To some people, that might mean that it's time to sit back and watch computers get faster: performance is no longer an issue, we'll let hardware do the work. Paying closer attention to memory reference patterns and loop structure can have a huge payoff. You'll learn what the newest buzzwords really mean, how caching and other memory design features affect the way your software behaves, and where the newest "post-RISC" architectures are headed.If you're involved with purcha
