Enabling you to select the programming paradigm to work well in a multicore system
| Date | Contributor | Description | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|
| 29 Jun 2009 | Linda Webb |
A visit to the neighborhood PC retail store provides ample proof that we are in the multicore era. The key differentiator among manufacturers today is the number of cores that they pack onto a single chip. The clock frequency of commodity processors has reached its limit, however, and is likely to stay below 4 GHz for years to come. As a result, adding cores is not synonymous with increasing computational power. To take full advantage of the performance enhancements offered by the new multicore hardware, a corresponding shift must take place in the software infrastructurea shift to parallel computing.
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| Tag | Applied By | Date/Time |
|---|---|---|
| mw article | MathWorks Classroom Resources Team | 26 Apr 2011 at 5:40pm |
| language english | MathWorks Classroom Resources Team | 26 Apr 2011 at 5:40pm |
| technical literature | MathWorks Classroom Resources Team | 26 Apr 2011 at 5:40pm |
| computer science | MathWorks Classroom Resources Team | 26 Apr 2011 at 5:40pm |
| programming and computer science | MathWorks Classroom Resources Team | 26 Apr 2011 at 5:40pm |
| whitepaper | Linda Webb | 29 Jun 2009 at 4:20pm |
| article | Linda Webb | 29 Jun 2009 at 4:20pm |
| thread | Linda Webb | 29 Jun 2009 at 4:20pm |
| parallel computing | Linda Webb | 29 Jun 2009 at 4:20pm |
| paper | Linda Webb | 29 Jun 2009 at 4:20pm |
| multicore processors | Linda Webb | 29 Jun 2009 at 4:20pm |
| multicore | Linda Webb | 29 Jun 2009 at 4:20pm |