The Beast from Below—How Changes in the Hardware Ecosystem will Disrupt Computer Science
For decades, computer scientists have relied on steadily advancing hardware capabilities. Moore’s Law coupled with Dennard Scaling have improved von Neumann computing by many orders of magnitude. Notably, the underlying changes have been largely invisible to software, with standard instruction sets and compilers hiding the complexity that has produced those enormous gains. However, the easy times are ending; many orders of magnitude gains in performance and efficiency are still achievable, but getting there will break our current notions of instruction sets, compilers, languages, data types, circuits, devices, and applications. Different classes of applications will be enabled, and whole new areas in computer science will emerge. Fortunately, many of the exciting emerging workloads (machine learning, computer vision, speech recognition, and so forth) will be amenable to this new era.
In this keynote from the 2013 Microsoft Research Faculty Summit, Doug Burger, Microsoft Research, discusses the reasons for this shift, and makes some predictions about how it will affect the field of computer science.
- Date:
- Haut-parleurs:
- Doug Burger
- Affiliation:
- Microsoft Research
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Lori Stone
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Taille: Microsoft Research Faculty Summit
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Quantum Computing and Workforce, Curriculum, and Application Development: Case study
Speakers:- Krysta M. Svore,
- Martin Roetteler
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Crowd, Cloud and the Future of Work: Updates from human AI computation
Speakers:- Besmira Nushi,
- Vani Mandava
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Empowering People to Achieve More: How Useful a Concept is Productivity?
Speakers:- Brendan Murphy
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Productivity in Software Development
Speakers:- Neel Sundaresan,
- Margaret-Anne Storey,
- Prem Kumar Devanbu
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Accessible Virtual Reality
Speakers:- Eyal Ofek
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Calendar.help: A Virtual Meeting Scheduling Assistant
Speakers:- Pamela Bhattacharya
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Visual Studio IntelliCode
Speakers:- Mark Wilson-Thomas
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Microsoft Teams: Collaborate with Any Researcher Anywhere
Speakers:- Jethro Seghers
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Project Alava: Programming Webs of Microcontrollers
Speakers:- James Devine,
- Teddy Seyed
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AI in PowerPoint
Speakers:- Kostas Seleskerov