mlimber writes “The New York Times is running a story about multicore computing and the efforts of Microsoft et al. to try to switch to the new paradigm: “The challenges [of parallel programming] have not dented the enthusiasm for the potential of the new parallel chips at Microsoft, where executives are betting that the arrival of manycore chips — processors with more than eight cores, possible as soon as 2010 — will transform the world of personal computing…. Engineers and computer scientis
Faster Chips Are Leaving Programmers in Their Dust
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Another One Bites the Dust
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Dust Eater / BrotherOfSodwee in AUS + more
The amount of dust a balcony can accumulate is beyond me. At the end of the day, if the only purpose of having balconies in Dubai is to clean them twice a week, you’re better of not having one at all. Or have some kind of perch that does not[...]
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IBM ready to launch eight-core Power7 chip
IBM appears set to launch an eight-core Power7 chip, if reports over at The Register are correct. Documents showed the Power7 chips scaling to 4.0GHz in 2010 on a 45nm process. Each core will yield 32 gigaflops of computing performance, or 256 gigaflops per chip. In terms of raw[...]
Hire fewer better programmers, more testers, top architects.
Gunnar Peterson picked up on a post on Ross Anderson’s group’s Light Blue Touchpaper blog: Conflict Theory Does the defence of a country or a system depend on the least effort, on the best effort, or on the sum of efforts? The last is optimal; the first is really awful[...]
