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About About Expand Submenu About About Overview History Expand Submenu The First Women of EECS Joseph Thomas Gier Diversity Expand Submenu Hear From Women in EECS Broadening Participation in EECS Visiting By the Numbers Special Events Expand Submenu 2022-23 2020-21 2019-20 2018-19 2017-18 The Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences (EECS) at UC Berkeley offers one of the stronge
Russell C Sears EECS Department University of California, Berkeley Technical Report No. UCB/EECS-2010-2 January 8, 2010 http://www2.eecs.berkeley.edu/Pubs/TechRpts/2010/EECS-2010-2.pdf An increasing range of applications requires robust support for atomic, durable and concurrent transactions. Databases provide the default solution, but force applications to interact via SQL and to forfeit control
Tyson Condie, Neil Conway, Peter Alvaro, Joseph M. Hellerstein, Khaled Elmeleegy and Russell Sears EECS Department University of California, Berkeley Technical Report No. UCB/EECS-2009-136 October 9, 2009 http://www2.eecs.berkeley.edu/Pubs/TechRpts/2009/EECS-2009-136.pdf MapReduce is a popular framework for data-intensive distributed computing of batch jobs. To simplify fault tolerance, the output
Michael Armbrust, Armando Fox, Rean Griffith, Anthony D. Joseph, Randy H. Katz, Andrew Konwinski, Gunho Lee, David A. Patterson, Ariel Rabkin, Ion Stoica and Matei Zaharia EECS Department University of California, Berkeley Technical Report No. UCB/EECS-2009-28 February 10, 2009 http://www2.eecs.berkeley.edu/Pubs/TechRpts/2009/EECS-2009-28.pdf Provided certain obstacles are overcome, we believe Clo
Home Research Technical Reports The Landscape of Parallel Computing Research: A View from Berkeley Krste Asanović, Ras Bodik, Bryan Christopher Catanzaro, Joseph James Gebis, Parry Husbands, Kurt Keutzer, David A. Patterson, William Lester Plishker, John Shalf, Samuel Webb Williams and Katherine A. Yelick EECS Department University of California, Berkeley Technical Report No. UCB/EECS-2006-183 Dec
Edward A. Lee EECS Department University of California, Berkeley Technical Report No. UCB/EECS-2006-1 January 10, 2006 http://www2.eecs.berkeley.edu/Pubs/TechRpts/2006/EECS-2006-1.pdf Threads are a seemingly straightforward adaptation of the dominant sequential model of computation to concurrent systems. Languages require little or no syntactic changes to support threads, and operating systems and
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