Pursuing a petaflop: point designs for 100 TF computers using PIM technologies

P. M. Kogge, S. C. Bass, J. B. Brockman, D. Z. Chen, E. Sha

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

37 Scopus citations

Abstract

This paper is a summary of a proposal submitted to the NSF 100 Tera Flops Point Design Study. Its main thesis is that the use of Processing-In-Memory (PIM) technology can provide an extremely dense and highly efficient base on which such computing systems can be constructed. The paper describes a strawman organization of one potential PIM chip, along with how multiple such chips might be organized into a real system, what the software supporting such a system might look like, and several applications which we will be attempting to place onto such a system.

Original languageEnglish
Pages88-97
Number of pages10
StatePublished - 1996
Externally publishedYes
EventProceedings of the 1996 6th Symposium on the Frontiers of Massively Parallel Computing, Frontiers'96 - Annapolis, MD, USA
Duration: 27 Oct 199631 Oct 1996

Conference

ConferenceProceedings of the 1996 6th Symposium on the Frontiers of Massively Parallel Computing, Frontiers'96
CityAnnapolis, MD, USA
Period27/10/9631/10/96

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