From: Kendra Smith
Sent: Monday, January 03, 2000 11:37 PM
To: M?crosöft Research Tech Talk, Sem. Notice
Cc: Kendra Smith
Subject: UW-CSE Colloq / 2-6-2000 / Baer / UW-CSE / 2K papers on caches by Y2K: Do we need more?
UW-CSE Colloq / 2-6-2000 / Baer / UW-CSE / 2K papers on caches by Y2K: Do we need more?
*NOTE* This lecture will be broadcast live via the Internet. See
http://www.cs.washington.edu/news/colloq.info.html for more information.
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
Seattle, Washington 98195
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Box 352350
(206) 543-1695
COLLOQUIUM
SPEAKER: Jean-Loup Baer
TITLE: 2K papers on caches by Y2K: Do we need more?
DATE: Thursday, January 6, 2000
TIME: 3:30 pm
PLACE: 134 Sieg Hall
HOST: Alan Borning
ABSTRACT:
Caches were introduced over 30 years ago. They have evolved from a single
level sectored cache, whose presence was oblivious to the Instruction Set
Architecture (ISA), to a multi-level hierarchy of caches, of various sizes
and associativities, that are exposed to the ISA, and that are accompanied
by a variety of hardware and software assists.
Caches have been a great success for enhancing the performance of computer
systems. We will briefly review some of the progress on cache design and
performance and give a personal anthology of key papers in the
area. However, in spite of the abundance of literature on the subject,
caches will remain an active area of research as long as the challenge of
the "memory wall" is still present. We will briefly describe our current
methodology for the design of cache assists, a methodology that borrows
from paradigms used in branch and value prediction.
Refreshments to follow.
Email: talk-info@cs.washington.edu
Info: http://www.cs.washington.edu