DocumentCode
2803896
Title
The Quest for Linear Equation Solvers and the Invention of Electronic Digital Computing
Author
Gustafson, John L.
Author_Institution
ClearSpeed Technol., Inc., San Jose, CA
fYear
2006
fDate
3-6 Oct. 2006
Firstpage
10
Lastpage
16
Abstract
The task that motivated Atanasoff\´s construction of the first electronic digital computer has a mathematical legacy going back thousands of years, and it remains the fundamental operation by which computers are measured; solving systems of linear equations. This is sometimes misconstrued as a "special purpose" form of computing, but is actually as general in application as is any basic block of source code involving the four arithmetic operations +, -, times, and +. Systems built for this function share many architectural features; 70 years after Atanasoff conceived the ABC, ClearSpeed is building hardware for the solution of the exact same type of calculation, but trillions of times faster. The quest for linear solvers has motivated some of the most important innovations in computing history
Keywords
development systems; electronic calculators; general purpose computers; microcomputers; ClearSpeed; arithmetic operation; computing innovations history; electronic digital computer; electronic digital computing; general purpose computing; linear equation solver; linear equation system; source code; Algebra; Application software; Arithmetic; Art; Buildings; Equations; Hardware; History; Mathematics; Technological innovation;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Modern Computing, 2006. JVA '06. IEEE John Vincent Atanasoff 2006 International Symposium on
Conference_Location
Sofia
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2643-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/JVA.2006.50
Filename
4022033
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