An Initial Implementation of Libfabric Conduit for OpenSHMEM-X

Author(s):  
Subhadeep Bhattacharya ◽  
Shaeke Salman ◽  
Manjunath Gorentla Venkata ◽  
Harsh Kundnani ◽  
Neena Imam ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
K. Weller ◽  
A. Giménez‐Arnau ◽  
C. Grattan ◽  
R. Asero ◽  
P. Mathelier‐Fusade ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 186 (2) ◽  
pp. 552
Author(s):  
E. Wong ◽  
S. Gupta ◽  
D. Deckelbaum ◽  
T. Razek ◽  
B. Nwomeh ◽  
...  

1992 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. S. Michalski ◽  
L. Kerschberg ◽  
K. A. Kaufman ◽  
J. S. Ribeiro

1989 ◽  
Vol 5 (02) ◽  
pp. 79-89
Author(s):  
Koichi Baba ◽  
Takao Wada ◽  
Soichi Kondo ◽  
M. S. O'Hare ◽  
James C. Schaff

Philadelphia Naval Shipyard's application of zone logic to ship overhaul is neither small nor isolated. PNSY started its implementation of zone logic in the late fall of 1986, targeting the Service Life Extension Program (SLEP) for USS Kitty Hawk (CV-63) as the initial application. The technical services of Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries Co., Ltd. (IHI), Japan were contracted to assist in this transition. This implementation on the Kitty Hawk is not a trial effort but involves about one third of the production man-days and covers over one half of the compartments on the ship. The actual SLEP production work on Kitty Hawk began in January 1988. Even though it is early in the three-year SLEP, zone logic already is proving its worth. This paper explains the zone logic methods and methodology applied at PNSY on Kitty Hawk. It also discusses the future of zone logic at PNSY and its continued application.


Author(s):  
Thomas Haigh ◽  
Mark Priestley ◽  
Crispin Rope

Having explored ENIAC’s actual use and the programs it ran the authors shift to a more abstract analytical level. Previous discussion of the invention of the modern computer has focused on the “stored program concept” as the crucial innovation setting modern computers apart from their more limited predecessors. The authors explore the origins of this phrase and its changing meaning over time. They look in detail at a 1944 document produced by J. Presper Eckert and sometimes claimed as a first statement of this concept, showing that it actually describes an electronic desk calculator. The authors summarize ENIAC’s capabilities after conversion and to compare these on both practical and theoretical levels with the 1945 EDVAC design and with several other early computers. This supports a balanced appraisal of the senses in which the converted ENIAC did and did not constitute an initial implementation of the key ideas from the 1945 design. The chapter argues for an appraisal of early computers better grounded in the historical realities of documented use, and against a widespread fixation on the notion of “universality” based on a school of theoretical computer science that gained prominence years later.


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