thinkingparallel.com
Two Job Openings At The Best Place To Work In Germany! - Thinking ParallelThinking Parallel
http://www.thinkingparallel.com/2007/11/29/two-job-openings-at-the-best-place-to-work-in-germany
A Blog on Parallel Programming and Concurrency by Michael Suess. Two Job Openings At The Best Place To Work In Germany! Now this is just typical. Last week I have finally gotten rid of my job board, because nobody was using it. Just a week later, my advisor asks me, where it went, because she would like to announce two job openings. Oh well. Murphy is everywhere. I won’t bring back the job board, because as we say in Germany. One swallow does not make a summer. By: Michael Suess 2007/11/29. In this case ...
thinkingparallel.com
Parallel Programming News for Week 47/2007 - Thinking ParallelThinking Parallel
http://www.thinkingparallel.com/2007/11/20/parallel-programming-news-for-week-472007
A Blog on Parallel Programming and Concurrency by Michael Suess. Parallel Programming News for Week 47/2007. MSDN introduces a Task Parallel Library. By Microsoft. It looks very similar to OpenMP, Intel’s TBB or even my own effort called AthenaMP (that I have been meaning to write about for quite some time now). What caught my eye was the very careful attention to exceptions, which is something that no other system of this scope has, as far as I know. Anwar Ghuloum points out some problems with GPGPU.
thinkingparallel.com
Parallel Programming News for Week 37/2007 - Thinking ParallelThinking Parallel
http://www.thinkingparallel.com/2007/09/14/parallel-programming-news-for-week-372007
A Blog on Parallel Programming and Concurrency by Michael Suess. Parallel Programming News for Week 37/2007. Which is the beautiful city where I was born and raised. Starting in October, I will be working at a company called TomTom WORK. Which is a division of TomTom. That’s it from me, here are the links I found interesting during the last few weeks:. In Hitting The Memory Wall. Uncle Bob over at the Object Mentor blog does not like threadprivate storage, but would rather have taskprivate storage. Bob W...
thinkingparallel.com
News Archives - Thinking ParallelThinking Parallel
http://www.thinkingparallel.com/category/news
A Blog on Parallel Programming and Concurrency by Michael Suess. Archive for the 'News' Category. Two Job Openings At The Best Place To Work In Germany! Now this is just typical. Last week I have finally gotten rid of my job board, because nobody was using it. Just a week later, my advisor asks me, where it went, because she would like to announce two job openings. Oh well. Murphy is everywhere. I won’t bring back the job board, because as […]. Parallel Programming News for Week 47/2007. Exactly one year...
thinkingparallel.com
Uncategorized Archives - Thinking ParallelThinking Parallel
http://www.thinkingparallel.com/category/uncategorized
A Blog on Parallel Programming and Concurrency by Michael Suess. Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category. Is the Multi-Core Revolution a Hype? Mark Nelson does not believe in the hype about multi-cores. And he is right with several of his arguments. The world is not going to end if we cannot write our applications to allow for concurrency, that’s for sure. Since I am working on parallel machines all day, it is easy to become a little […]. You Are What You Read? Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year 2007!
thinkingparallel.com
Choice Overload and Parallel Programming - Thinking ParallelThinking Parallel
http://www.thinkingparallel.com/2007/10/18/choice-overload-and-parallel-programming
A Blog on Parallel Programming and Concurrency by Michael Suess. Choice Overload and Parallel Programming. And a follow up called Is anyone dumb enough to think yet another parallel language will solve our problems? While I think Tim raises some very valid points, I still believe his conclusions are in need of some more discussion! 🙂 This post also includes a call to action at the bottom, so be sure to read it until the end! The post must fit in here. Just read a couple of my posts in the past and y...
thinkingparallel.com
Top 15 Mistakes in OpenMP - Thinking ParallelThinking Parallel
http://www.thinkingparallel.com/2007/08/31/top-15-mistakes-in-openmp
A Blog on Parallel Programming and Concurrency by Michael Suess. Top 15 Mistakes in OpenMP. It has been a while since I have done this little experiment, but I still find the results interesting. As some of you may know, I teach a class on parallel programming (this is an undergraduate class, by the way – may I have a million dollar in funding. Now as well, please? Access to shared variables not protected. Use of locks without. As of OpenMP 2.5, this is no longer a mistake). Declare loop variable in.
thinkingparallel.com
Interviews Archives - Thinking ParallelThinking Parallel
http://www.thinkingparallel.com/category/interviews
A Blog on Parallel Programming and Concurrency by Michael Suess. Archive for the 'Interviews' Category. An Interview with Dr. Jay Hoeflinger about Automatic Parallelization. When I started my PhD.-thesis a couple of years ago, I took some time to look at auto-parallelizing compilers and research. After all, I wanted to work on making parallel programming easier, and the best way to do that would surely be to let compilers do all the work. Unfortunately, the field appeared to be […]. This is the third pos...
thinkingparallel.com
Thinking Parallel - Page 2 of 8 - A Blog on Parallel Programming and Concurrency by Michael SuessThinking Parallel | A Blog on Parallel Programming and Concurrency by Michael Suess
http://www.thinkingparallel.com/page/2
A Blog on Parallel Programming and Concurrency by Michael Suess. August 6, 2007. What Makes Parallel Programming Hard? Anwar Ghuloum has posted his opinion about What Makes Parallel Programming Hard. At the Intel Research Blogs. July 31, 2007. 10 Ways to Reduce Lock Contention in Threaded Programs. Or by just not using locks. At all. Most of the time the result happens to work on their machine but has subtle bugs that surface later. Let’s see what the experts say about using locks, in this ...Could not h...
linuxtoolkit.blogspot.com
Linux Toolkits: Deleting Users' Crontab
http://linuxtoolkit.blogspot.com/2015/07/deleting-users-crontab.html
Linux Toolkits Blog is a scratch-pad of tips and findings on Linux. Saturday, July 4, 2015. Users' Crontab are stored in /var/spool/cron/. If you need to clean out a user crontab files, you can delete the file there. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Xrdp mm process login response: login failed. SSH Error : Permission denied (publickey, gssapi-with-mic,password). Device eth0 does not seem to be present" on cloned CentOS VM. Starting VNC server: no displays configured on CentOS 6.