Tagged "Editorial"
Articles that express opinions and editorialize from the author’s perspective
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Reflections on 30 Years of HPC Programming:
So many hardware advances, so little adoption of new languagesPosted on April 9, 2026
This summary of Brad’s HIPS 2025 keynote looks at how HPC programming has (and has not) changed over the past 30 years
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10 Myths About Scalable Parallel Programming Languages (Redux)
Part 8: Striving Toward AdoptabilityPosted on November 12, 2025
The eighth and final archival post from the 2012 IEEE TCSC blog series, with a current reflection on it
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10 Myths About Scalable Parallel Programming Languages (Redux)
Part 7: Minimalist Language DesignsPosted on October 15, 2025
The seventh archival post from the 2012 IEEE TCSC blog series, with a current reflection on it
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10 Myths About Scalable Parallel Programming Languages (Redux)
Part 6: Performance of Higher-Level LanguagesPosted on September 17, 2025
The sixth archival post from the 2012 IEEE TCSC blog series, with a current reflection on it
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10 Myths About Scalable Parallel Programming Languages (Redux)
Part 5: Productivity and Magic CompilersPosted on August 20, 2025
The fifth archival post from the 2012 IEEE TCSC blog series, with a current reflection on it
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10 Myths About Scalable Parallel Programming Languages (Redux)
Part 4: Syntax MattersPosted on July 23, 2025
The fourth archival post from the 2012 IEEE TCSC blog series, with a current reflection on it
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10 Myths About Scalable Parallel Programming Languages (Redux)
Part 3: New Languages vs. Language ExtensionsPosted on June 25, 2025
A third archival post from the 2012 IEEE TCSC blog series, with a current reflection on it
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10 Myths About Scalable Parallel Programming Languages (Redux)
Part 2: Past Failures and Future AttemptsPosted on May 28, 2025
Another archival post from the IEEE TCSC blog in 2012, with a current reflection on it
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10 Myths About Scalable Parallel Programming Languages (Redux)
Part 1: Productivity and PerformancePosted on April 30, 2025
An archival post from the IEEE TCSC blog in 2012, with a current reflection on it