Artificial intelligence (2nd ed.)
Artificial intelligence (2nd ed.)
Principles of artificial intelligence
Principles of artificial intelligence
Garbage Collection of Linked Data Structures
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
An Introduction to Database Systems
An Introduction to Database Systems
Database Design
Introduction to VLSI Systems
SYMSAC '71 Proceedings of the second ACM symposium on Symbolic and algebraic manipulation
ALI: A procedural language to describe VLSI layouts
DAC '82 Proceedings of the 19th Design Automation Conference
Computer
Computer
Addressing patterns and memory handling algorithms
AFIPS '68 (Fall, part II) Proceedings of the December 9-11, 1968, fall joint computer conference, part II
On input/output speedup in tightly coupled multiprocessors
IEEE Transactions on Computers - The MIT Press scientific computation series
Comments on "A Massive Memory Machine"
IEEE Transactions on Computers
A Crash Recovery Scheme for a Memory-Resident Database System
IEEE Transactions on Computers
Database Migration in WAN Environments: How Can It Earn Good Performance?
DEXA '00 Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Database and Expert Systems Applications
Low overhead concurrency control for partitioned main memory databases
Proceedings of the 2010 ACM SIGMOD International Conference on Management of data
Distributed anemone: transparent low-latency access to remote memory
HiPC'06 Proceedings of the 13th international conference on High Performance Computing
Hi-index | 15.01 |
This paper argues the case for a computer with massive amounts of primary storage, on the order of tens of billions of bytes. We argue that such a machine, even with a relatively slow processor, can outperform all other super-computers on memory bound computations. This machine would be simple to program. In addition, it could lead to new and highly efficient programs which traded the available space for running time. We present a novel architecture for such a machine, and show how it can lead to reduced memory access times and higher reliability.