[Beowulf] [hpc-announce] IEEE Computer: Special Issue on "Tools and Environments for Multi- and Many-Core Architectures"
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Wuchun Feng feng at cs.vt.eduWed Mar 11 10:06:09 PDT 2009
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An amended CFP ... this time, with web links to the submission guidelines and instructions. Regards, Wu ---- IEEE Computer Special Issue on Tools and Environments for Multi- and Many-Core Architectures DEADLINE EXTENDED to March 31, 2009 For submission instructions, please visit http://www.computer.org/portal/pages/computer/content/author.html To submit, go to https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/cs-ieee. In the past, computing speeds doubled every 18-24 months by increasing the clock speed, thus giving software a "free ride" to better performance whenever the clock speed increased. This free ride is now over, and such automatic performance improvement is no longer possible. With clock speeds stalling out and computational horsepower instead increasing due to the rapid doubling of the number of cores per processor, serial computing is now dead, and the vision for parallel computing, which started over forty years ago, is a revolution that is now upon us. With the advent of multi-core chips --- from the traditional AMD and Intel multi-core to the more exotic hybrid multi-core of IBM Cell and many-core of AMD/ATi and nVidia GPGPUs --- parallel computing across multiple cores on a single chip has become a necessity. However, writing parallel applications is a significant undertaking that will create more, not less, problematic software. In order for parallelism to succeed, it must ultimately produce better performance relative to speed and efficiency. However, not only are most programmers ill-equipped to produce proper parallel programs, but they also lack the tools and environments for producing such programs. Therefore, the purpose of this special issue is to present the latest advances in next-generation tools and environments for multi- and many- core architectures. We solicit contributions in areas including, but not limited to: - Programming models and environments for multi-core and many-core architectures - Systems scheduling and management between different subsystems of multi-core and many-core architectures - Compile-time and run-time optimizations in multi-core and many-core architectures - Tools to enhance programming productivity in multi-core and many- core architectures - Performance evaluation of applications and system software in multi- core and many-core architectures - Software productivity studies - Fault tolerance and virtualization - Monitoring and measurement tools to better enable debugging and performance optimization -- Prof. Wu FENG | Synergy Laboratory | Depts. of CS and ECE | 2202 Kraft Dr | Virginia Tech | Blacksburg, VA 24060-6356 | 540-231-1192 | feng at cs.vt.edu | http://www.cs.vt.edu/~feng
- Previous message: [Beowulf] Re: Cluster doesn't like being moved (Steve Herborn)
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