default search action
10th ISCA 1983: Stockholm, Sweden
- Harold W. Lawson Jr., Tilak Agerwala, Hans H. Heilborn, Hideo Aiso, Lars-Erik Thorelli, Jean-Loup Baer, Mario Tokoro:
Proceedings of the 10th Annual Symposium on Computer Architecture, 1983. ACM 1983, ISBN 0-89791-101-6 - Maurice V. Wilkes:
Size, Power, and Speed. 2-4 - Wolfgang K. Giloi:
Towards a Taxonomy of Computer Architecture Based on the Machine Data Type View. 6-15 - Algirdas Avizienis:
Frameworks for a Taxonomy of Fault-Tolerance Attributes in Computer Systems. 16-21 - Björn Pehrson, Joachim Parrow:
Caddie - An Interactive Design Environment. 24-31 - Subrata Dasgupta:
On the Verification of Computer Architectures Using an Architecture Description Language. 32-38 - Richard M. King:
Research on Synthesis of Concurrent Computing Systems. 39-46 - Allan L. Fisher, H. T. Kung, Louis Monier, Yasunori Dohi:
Architecture of the PSC: A Programmable Systolic Chip. 48-53 - Allan L. Fisher, H. T. Kung:
Synchronizing Large VLSI Processor Arrays. 54-58 - Robert A. Wagner:
The Boolean Vector Machine [BVM]. 59-66 - Maurizio A. Bonuccelli, Elena Lodi, Fabrizio Luccio, Piero Maestrini, Linda Pagli:
A VLSI Tree Machine for Relational Data Bases. 67-73 - L. J. Caluwaerts, J. Debacker, J. A. Peperstraete:
Implementing Streams on a Data Flow Computer System With Paged Memory. 76-83 - Joseph E. Requa:
The Piecewise Data Flow Architecture Control Flow and Register Management. 84-89 - Mario Tokoro, J. R. Jagannathan, Hideki Sunahara:
On the Working Set Concept for Data-Flow Machines. 90-97 - R. W. Marczynski, J. Milewski:
A Data Driven System Based on a Microprogrammed Processor Module. 98-106 - David A. Patterson, Phil Garrison, Mark D. Hill, Dimitris Lioupis, Chris Nyberg, Tim Sippel, Korbin S. Van Dyke:
Architecture of a VLSI Instruction Cache for a RISC. 108-116 - Phil C. C. Yeh, Janak H. Patel, Edward S. Davidson:
Performance of Shared Cache for Parallel-Pipelined Computer Systems. 117-123 - James R. Goodman:
Using Cache Memory to Reduce Processor-Memory Traffic. 124-131 - James E. Smith, James R. Goodman:
A Study of Instruction Cache Organizations and Replacement Policies. 132-137 - Joseph A. Fisher:
Very Long Instruction Word Architectures and the ELI-512. 140-150 - Shinji Tomita, Kiyoshi Shibayama, Toshiaki Kitamura, Toshiyuki Nakata, Hiroshi Hagiwara:
A User-Microprogrammable, Local Host Computer With Low-Level Parallelism. 151-157 - Richard H. Gumpertz:
Combining Tags With Error Codes. 160-165 - Young Gil Park, Jung Wan Cho:
Fault Diagnosis of Bit-Slice Processor. 166-172 - Miguel Angel Fiol, Ignacio Alegre, J. Luis A. Yebra:
Line Digraph Iterations and the (d,k) Problem for Directed Graphs. 174-177 - Eli Opper, Miroslaw Malek, G. Jack Lipovski:
Resource Allocation in Rectangular CC-Banyans. 178-184 - Frantisek Sovis:
Uniform Theory of the Shuffle-Exchange Type Permutation Networks. 185-191 - Vason P. Srini, Jorge F. Asenjo:
Analysis of Cray-1S Architecture. 194-206 - Harry F. Jordan:
Performance Measurements on HEP - A Pipelined MIMD Computer. 207-212 - Hideharu Amano, Takaichi Yoshida, Hideo Aiso:
(SM)2: Sparse Matrix Solving Machine. 213-220 - R. Kalyana Krishnan, A. K. Rajasekar, C. S. Moghe:
An Experimental System for Computer Science Instruction. 222-227 - Klaus Kronlöf:
Execution Control and Memory Management of a Data Flow Signal Processor. 230-235 - Masasuke Kishi, Hiroshi Yasuhara, Yasusuke Kawamura:
DDDP: A Distributed Data Driven Processor. 236-242 - Naohisa Takahashi, Makoto Amamiya:
A Data Flow Processor Array System: Design and Analysis. 243-250 - Kenneth A. Pier:
A Retrospective on the Dorado, A High-Performance Personal Computer. 252-269 - Robert J. Dugan:
System/370 Extended Architecture: A Program View of the Channel Subsystem. 270-276 - Richard L. Norton, Jacob A. Abraham:
Adaptive Interpretation as a Means of Exploiting Complex Instruction Sets. 277-282 - Manoj Kumar, Daniel M. Dias, J. Robert Jump:
Switching Strategies in a Class of Packet Switching Networks. 284-300 - Benjamin W. Wah:
A Comparative Study of Distributed Resource Sharing on Multiprocessors. 301-308 - W. Kent Fuchs, Jacob A. Abraham, Kuang-Hua Huang:
Concurrent Error Detection in VLSI Interconnection Networks. 309-315 - Wolfgang K. Giloi, Peter M. Behr:
Hierarchical Function Distribution - A Design Principle for Advanced Multicomputer Architectures. 318-325 - Luigi Stringa:
EMMA: An Industrial Experience on Large Multiprocessing Architectures. 326-333 - Lars H. Philipson, Bo Nilsson, Bjorn Breidegard:
A Communication Structure for a Multiprocessor Computer with Distributed Global Memory. 334-340 - Hiromu Hayashi, Akira Hattori, Haruo Akimoto:
ALPHA: A High-Performance LISP Machine Equipped with a New Stack Structure and Garbage Collection System. 342-348 - Shinji Umeyama, Koichiro Tamura:
A Parallel Execution Model of Logic Programs. 349-355 - Claudia Schmittgen, Werner E. Kluge:
A System Architecture for the Concurrent Evaluation of Applicative Program Expressions. 356-362 - Yoshinori Yamaguchi, Kenji Toda, Toshitsugu Yuba:
A Performance Evaluation of a Lisp-Based Data-Driven Machine (EM-3). 363-369 - Steven L. Tanimoto:
A Pyramidal Approach to Parallel Processing. 372-378 - Gerard Gaillat:
The Design of a Parallel Processor for Image Processing On-Board Satellites: An Application Oriented Approach. 372-386 - Hitoshi Nishimura, Hiroshi Ohno, Toru Kawata, Isao Shirakawa, Koichi Omura:
LINKS-1: A Parallel Pipelined Multimicrocomputer System for Image Creation. 387-394 - T. Ericsson, Per-Erik Danielsson:
LIPP-A SIMD Multiprocessor Architecture for Image Processing. 395-400 - Philip C. Treleaven:
The New Generation of Computer Architecture. 402-409 - Shunichi Uchida:
Inference Machine: From Sequential to Paralle. 410-416 - Tohru Moto-Oka:
Overview to the Fifth Generation Computer System Project. 417-422 - Kunio Murakami, Takeo Kakuta, Nobuyoshi Miyazaki, Shigeki Shibayama, Haruo Yokota:
A Relational Data Base Machine: First Step to Knowledge Base Machine. 423-425 - Arvind, Robert A. Iannucci:
A Critique of Multiprocessing von Neumann Style. 426-436
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.