Hitting the memory wall: implications of the obvious
ACM SIGARCH Computer Architecture News
Memory bandwidth limitations of future microprocessors
ISCA '96 Proceedings of the 23rd annual international symposium on Computer architecture
Missing the memory wall: the case for processor/memory integration
ISCA '96 Proceedings of the 23rd annual international symposium on Computer architecture
Design of the 21174 memory controller for DIGITAL Personal Workstations
Digital Technical Journal
ISCA '01 Proceedings of the 28th annual international symposium on Computer architecture
High-Performance DRAMs in Workstation Environments
IEEE Transactions on Computers
Access ordering and memory-conscious cache utilization
HPCA '95 Proceedings of the 1st IEEE Symposium on High-Performance Computer Architecture
Impulse: Building a Smarter Memory Controller
HPCA '99 Proceedings of the 5th International Symposium on High Performance Computer Architecture
Efficiently exploring architectural design spaces via predictive modeling
Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Architectural support for programming languages and operating systems
Efficient architectural design space exploration via predictive modeling
ACM Transactions on Architecture and Code Optimization (TACO)
Optimizing thread throughput for multithreaded workloads on memory constrained CMPs
Proceedings of the 5th conference on Computing frontiers
Architecture performance prediction using evolutionary artificial neural networks
Evo'08 Proceedings of the 2008 conference on Applications of evolutionary computing
Streaming sparse matrix compression/decompression
HiPEAC'05 Proceedings of the First international conference on High Performance Embedded Architectures and Compilers
DRAM selection and configuration for real-time mobile systems
DATE '12 Proceedings of the Conference on Design, Automation and Test in Europe
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The widening gap between today's processor and memory speeds makes dram subsystem design an increasingly important part of computer system design. If the dram research community would follow the microprocessor community's lead by leaning more heavily on architecture--and system-level solutions in addition to technology-level solutions to achieve higher performance, the gap might begin to close.