Computer Society Distinguished Visitor: "Eight Key Ideas in Computer Architecture from Eight Decades of Innovation"

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The IEEE North Saskatchewan Section Computer Chapter in collaboration with Innovation Place, Calian Advanced Technologies and University of Saskatchewan Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering is proud to welcome IEEE Computer Society Distinguished Visitor, Dr. Behrooz Parhami, to Saskatoon for a series of 2 lectures.

This is the information about the 1st of 2 lectures titled "Eight Key Ideas in Computer Architecture from Eight Decades of Innovation".

It will take place at the College of Engineering at the University of Saskatchewan on Thursday, September 22 at 10:00 am in room 2C88.

Admission is FREE!

 

Information about the 2nd lecture can be found here: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/322154

If you have any questions, please contact Cinnati Loi at c.loi@ieee.org.



  Date and Time

  Location

  Hosts

  Registration



  • Date: 22 Sep 2022
  • Time: 04:00 PM UTC to 05:20 PM UTC
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  • University of Saskatchewan
  • 57 Campus Drive
  • Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
  • Canada
  • Building: Engineering Building
  • Room Number: Room 2C88

  • Contact Event Host
  • Co-sponsored by Calian Advanced Technologies, Innovation Place, University of Saskatchewan Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
  • Starts 20 August 2022 03:00 PM UTC
  • Ends 22 September 2022 05:00 PM UTC
  • No Admission Charge


  Speakers

Dr. Behrooz Parhami Dr. Behrooz Parhami of University of California, Santa Barbara

Topic:

Eight Key Ideas in Computer Architecture from Eight Decades of Innovation

Computer architecture became an established discipline when the stored-program concept was incorporated into bare-bones computers of the 1940s. Since then, the field has seen multiple minor and major innovations in each decade. I will present my pick of the most important innovation in each of the eight decades, from the 1940s to the 2010s, and show how these ideas, when connected to each other and allowed to interact and cross-fertilize, produced the phenomenal growth of computer performance, now approaching exa-op/s (billion billion operations per second) level, as well as to ultra-low-energy and single-chip systems. I will also offer predictions for what to expect in the 2020s and beyond.

Biography:

Behrooz Parhami (PhD in computer science from University of California, Los Angeles, 1973) is Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, and former Associate Dean for Academic Personnel, College of Engineering, at University of California, Santa Barbara. He has research interests in computer arithmetic, parallel processing, and dependable computing. In his previous position with Sharif (formerly Arya-Mehr) University of Technology in Tehran, Iran (1974-1988), he was also involved in educational planning, curriculum development, standardization efforts, technology transfer, and various editorial responsibilities, including a five-year term as Editor of Computer Report, a Persian-language computing periodical. His technical publications include over 300 papers in peer-reviewed journals and international conferences, a Persian-language textbook, and an English/Persian glossary of computing terms. Among his publications are three textbooks on parallel processing (Plenum, 1999), computer arithmetic (Oxford, 2000; 2nd ed. 2010), and computer architecture (Oxford, 2005). Professor Parhami is a Life Fellow of IEEE, a Fellow of IET, a Chartered Fellow of the British Computer Society, a member of the Association for Computing Machinery and American Society for Engineering Education, and a Distinguished Member of the Informatics Society of Iran for which he served as a founding member and President during 1979-84. Professor Parhami has served on the editorial boards of IEEE Trans. Sustainable Computing (since 2016), IEEE Trans. Computers (2009-2014; 2016-now), IEEE Trans. Parallel and Distributed Systems (2006-2010), and International J. Parallel, Emergent and Distributed Systems (2006-2012). He also chaired IEEE’s Iran Section (1977-1986), received the IEEE Centennial Medal in 1984, and was honored with a most-cited paper award from J. Parallel & Distributed Computing in 2010. His consulting activities cover the design of high-performance digital systems and associated intellectual property issues.

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