IEEE Transactions on Computers
A universal computer capable of executing an arbitrary number of sub-programs simultaneously
IRE-AIEE-ACM '59 (Eastern) Papers presented at the December 1-3, 1959, eastern joint IRE-AIEE-ACM computer conference
AFIPS '62 (Fall) Proceedings of the December 4-6, 1962, fall joint computer conference
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As computer processing power has increased over the past three decades, so have demands on computer performance. In the race of computer technology to keep abreast of these demands, more and more attention has been given to parallel hardware organizational techniques. Instruction and data pipelining, instruction overlapping and distributed processing are examples of such techniques.