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36th COMPCON 1991: San Francisco, California, USA
- Compcon Spring '91, San Francisco, California, USA, February 25 - March 1, 1991. Digest of Papers. IEEE Computer Society 1991, ISBN 0-8186-2134-6
- Steve McGeady, Randy Steck, Glenn Hinton, Atiq Bajwa:
Performance enhancements in the superscalar i960MM embedded microprocessor. 4-7 - Asghar Bashteen, Ivy Lui, Jill Mullan:
A superpipeline approach to the MIPS architecture. 8-12 - Bruce D. Lightner, Gene Hill:
The Metaflow Lightning chipset. 13-18 - Ashfaq R. Khan:
The AMD Am286ZX microprocessor. 20-25 - Tom Lacey:
Put a SPARC into your PC. 28-33 - Brian Rosen:
A marriage of PC and workstation technologies. 34-36 - Paul Afshar:
Trends in building a SPARC compatible system: a case study in methods and tools. 37-41 - Eugene D. Brooks III, Brent C. Gorda, Karen H. Warren, Tammy S. Welcome:
BBN TC2000 architecture and programming models. 46-50 - Milo R. Dorr, James M. Ferguson:
A killer micro attack on 3D neutron transport. 51-56 - Karen H. Warren, Eugene D. Brooks III:
Gauss elimination: a case study on parallel machines. 57-61 - Paul Messina:
Parallel and distributed supercomputing at Caltech. 64-67 - Roy Williams:
DIME: portable software for irregular meshes for parallel or sequential computer. 68-72 - John Salmon:
Parallel N log N N-body algorithms and applications to astrophysics. 73-78 - Nicholas E. Aneshansley:
Integrated heterogeneous processing. 80-85 - Glen J. Culler:
The Star 910/VP as a scientific computer in Sun networks. 86-89 - Richard Bahr, Stephen Ciavaglia, Barry Flahive, Mark Kline, Paul Mageau, Donovan Nickel:
The DN 10000TX: a new high-performance PRISM processor. 90-95 - Carol Pearson:
Moving data in parallel. 100-104 - Harry Leslie:
Optimizing parallel query plans and execution. 105-109 - Susanne Englert:
Load balancing batch and interactive queries in a highly parallel environment. 110-112 - Jeffrey H. Balboni:
SQL access overview. 114-119 - Paul Perkovic:
SQL access and ANSI/ISO SQL and X/Open. 120-122 - Harjit Sabharwal:
SQL Access and ISO/RDA. 123-126 - Rafi Ahmed, Philippe De Smedt, William Kent, Mohammad A. Ketabchi, Witold Litwin, Abbas Rafii, Ming-Chien Shan:
Pegasus: a system for seamless integration of heterogeneous information sources. 128-136 - Marek Rusinkiewicz, Dimitrios Georgakopoulos:
Multidatabase transactions: impediments and opportunities. 137-144 - Yuri Breitbart, Witold Litwin, Avi Silberschatz:
Deadlock problems in a multidatabase environment. 145-151 - Weimin Du, Ahmed K. Elmagarmid, Won Kim:
Maintaining transaction consistency in multidatabases using quasi serializable executions. 152-155 - Raymond W. Lo, P. Kerchen, Richard H. Crawford, W. Wilson Ho, J. Crossley, George Fink, Karl N. Levitt, Ronald A. Olsson, Myla Archer:
Towards a testbed for malicious code detection. 160-166 - Matt Bishop:
Password management. 167-169 - Steven R. Snapp, James Brentano, Gihan V. Dias, Terrance Goan, Tim Grance, Todd L. Heberlein, Che-Lin Ho, Karl N. Levitt, Biswanath Mukherjee, Douglass L. Mansur, Kenneth L. Pon, Stephen E. Smaha:
A system for distributed intrusion detection. 170-176 - Jim Alves-Foss, Karl N. Levitt:
The verification of secure distributed systems. 177-184 - Evan Hendricks:
Computers and privacy in the pivotal decade. 186-188 - James Bidzos:
Threats to privacy and public keys for protection. 189-194 - K. Eric Drexler:
Freedom of the press for the press of the future. 196-198 - Mark E. Forsyth, Steve Mangelsdorf, Eric DeLano, Craig Gleason, Jeff Yetter, Donald Steiss:
CMOS PA-RISC processor for a new family of workstations. 202-207 - Rob Horning, Leith Johnson, Larry Thayer, Daniel Li, Victoria Meier, Casey Dowdell, David Roberts:
System design for a low cost PA-RISC desktop workstation. 208-213 - Daryl Odnert, Robert Hansen, Manoj Dadoo, Mark S. Laventhal:
Architecture and compiler enhancements for PA-RISC workstations. 214-218 - Michael J. K. Nielsen:
DECstation 5000 Model 200. 220-225 - Michael J. K. Nielsen:
TURBOchannel. 226-233 - Zahid Hussain, Brian Kelleher:
PixelStamp graphics subsystems for the DECstation 5000. 234-238 - Howard Sachs, Harlan McGhan:
Future directions in CLIPPER processors. 240-246 - Lee F. Hanson, Nathan A. Brookwood:
The C400 superscalar/superpipelined RISC design. 247-251 - William Baxter, Roger Arnold:
Code restructuring for enhanced performance on a pipelined processor. 252-260 - James H. Jackson:
The Data Transport ComputerTM: a 3-dimensional massively parallel SIMD computer. 264-269 - Charles D. Stormon:
The Coherent Processor: an associative processor architecture and applications. 270-275 - James R. Fischer, John Dorband:
Applications of the MasPar MP-1 at NASA/Goddard. 278-282 - Eric Barszcz:
One year with an iPSC/860. 283-288 - Bob Foster, Curtis Alexander, Allen Roberts, David Roberts:
An ECL RISC multiprocessor. 289-292 - Kenichi Miura, Hiroshi Nagakura, Hiroshi Tamura:
VP2000 series dual scalar and quadruple scalar models supercomputer systems-a new concept in vector processing. 294-302 - Tadashi Watanabe:
The NEC SX-3 supercomputer system. 303-308 - Venkappa L. Gani, Matthew Graf, Keith Mathews, Edward B. Eichelberger:
IBM ES/9000 model 320 air cooled computer technology. 309-313 - Stephen C. Purcell:
The C-cube CL550-JPEG image compression processor. 318-323 - Ryan Manepally, David L. Sprague:
Intel's i750 (R) video processor-the programmable solution. 324-329 - David Auld:
A flexible chip set for intra frame video compression. 330-332 - Didier J. Le Gall:
The MPEG video compression standard. 334-335 - James D. Johnston:
MPEG-audio draft, description as of Dec. 10, 1990-ISO/IEC JTC1/SC2/WG11. 336-337 - Alexander G. MacInnis:
MPEG systems committee draft-ISO/IEC JTC1/SC2/WG11. 338-339 - Prem Uppaluru:
An overview of the Fluent video system architecture. 340-342 - Daniel R. Helman:
General purpose data compression ICs. 344-348 - Adriaan Ligtenberg:
JPEG++: selective compression for high quality color desktop publishing. 349-353 - Glen G. Langdon Jr.:
Adaptive binary arithmetic coding for multi-media applications. 354-357 - Peter H. Salus:
UNIX software next... 362-364 - Jeffrey S. Haemer, Shane P. McCarron, Peter H. Salus:
Trends in UNIX software. 365-368 - M. Burch:
A look at computing in the 1990s. 369-374 - Joxan Jaffar, Spiro Michaylov, Peter J. Stuckey, Roland H. C. Yap:
The CLP(R) language and system: an overview. 376-381 - Pascal Van Hentenryck:
The CLP language CHIP: constraint solving and applications. 382-387 - Alan Borning, Bjørn N. Freeman-Benson, John Maloney, Molly Wilson:
Constraint hierarchies and their applications. 388-393 - David C. Cann:
Vectorization of an applicative language: current results and future directions. 396-402 - Timothy G. Mattson:
Portable programs for parallel computers using STRAND88. 403-406 - Ronald A. Olsson:
Parallelism, distribution, and synchronization in SR. 407-412 - Andre Goforth, Philippe Collard, Matthew Marquardt:
Parallel programming in Ada: experience and results. 413-419 - Jeff Lewis:
EDA environments in 1995: specification, not implementation. 424-427 - Michael S. O'Brien, Jim Lipman:
EDA 1995: challenges for ASIC vendors. 428-433 - Ronald S. Rudokas, Peter S. Guilfoyle:
A digital optical implementation of RISC. 436-441 - Mark A. Neifeld, Alan A. Yamamura, Subrata Rakshit, Seiji Kobayashi, Demetri Psaltis:
Optical disks in optical computing. 442-447 - Jeffrey Joyce, Erwin Liu, John M. Rushby, Natarajan Shankar, Roberto Suaya, Friedrich W. von Henke:
From formal verification to silicon compilation. 450-455 - Mandayam K. Srivas:
Bridging the formal methods gap: a computer-aided verification tool for hardware designs. 456-461 - Phillip J. Windley:
The practical verification of microprocessor designs. 462-467 - Lawrence D. Jackel, Charles E. Stenard, Henry S. Baird, Bernhard E. Boser, Jane Bromley, Christopher J. C. Burges, John S. Denker, Hans Peter Graf, Donnie Henderson, Richard E. Howard, Wayne E. Hubbard, Yann LeCun, Ofer Matan, Edwin P. D. Pednault, William Satterfield, Eduard Säckinger, Timothy J. Thompson:
A neural network approach to handprint character recognition. 472-475 - Candace M. Anderson:
Automated recognition of embossed characters using artificial neural systems. 476-482 - Robert M. Carr:
Handwriting recognition in the GO operating system. 483-486 - Christopher L. Scofield, Lannie Kenton, Jung-Chou Chang:
Multiple neural net architectures for character recognition. 487-491 - Brad Hartfield:
The relation of design to human concerns (software design). 494-497 - Paul Heckel:
Conceptual models and metaphor in software design. 498-499 - Laura De Young:
Interacting with users in the design process. 500 - Arvola Chan, Setrag Khoshafian, Razmik Abnous, Roger Blumer:
Intelligent object-oriented features in distributed databases. 504-509 - Doug Fang, Joachim Hammer, Dennis McLeod, Antonio Si:
Remote-Exchange: an approach to controlled sharing among autonomous, heterogeneous database systems. 510-515 - Setrag Khoshafian, Lynne Thieme:
Declarative reasoning extensions to commercial SQL database management systems. 516-521 - Stanley Y. W. Su, Abdallah M. Alashqur:
A pattern-based constraint specification language for object-oriented databases. 522-531 - Pankaj Goyal:
Issues in the adoption of object-oriented paradigm. 534-539 - Mikio Aoyama:
Current state of object technology in Japan. 540-545 - Jianhua Zhu, Rodolphe Nassif, Pankaj Goyal, Rao Mikkilineni:
A perspective on object-oriented technology. 546-552 - Souripriya Das, B. Gopinath, D. Kurshan:
Foundations of concurrency among objects. 553-559 - Johannes Klein:
Advanced rule driven transaction management. 562-567 - Hector Garcia-Molina, Dieter Gawlick, Johannes Klein, Karl Kleissner, Kenneth Salem:
Coordinating activities through extended sagas: a summary. 568-573 - Helmut Wächter:
ConTracts: a means for improving reliability in distributed computing. 574-578 - Candace L. Voelker:
Licensing government-funded technologies at the University of California. 582-587 - Joseph Allen:
Commercializing federal technology. 588-589 - Ronald E. Barks:
Opportunities for accelerating commercial development via effective partnering. 590-591 - Michael R. Moyle:
A lawyer's perspective on joint US/Japan computing ventures. 594-596
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