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Joe Send mail to the author(s) leads the architecture of an experimental OS's developer platform, where he is also chief architect of its programming language. His current mission is to enable writing large-scale software that is reliable, secure, and scalable by-construction. Before this, Joe founded the Parallel Extensions to .NET project. He has been granted 19 patents, with 49 pending. When not working, Joe enjoys travelling with his wife, writing books, writing music, studying music theory & mathematics, and doing anything involving food & wine.

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The content of this site are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in anyway.

© 2012, Joe Duffy

 
 Friday, October 31, 2008

Dan Grossman invited me to deliver a talk as part of the University of Washington's Computer Science and Engineering Colloquia series.  It was recorded and will eventually air on UWTV, but has also been posted online:

Microsoft's Parallel Computing Platform: Applied Research in a Product Setting

The goal of Microsoft's Parallel Computing Platform (PCP) team is to enable the shift to modern, multi- and manycore hardware, by providing a runtime, programming models, libraries, and tools that make it easy for developers to construct correct, efficient, maintainable, and scalable programs through the use of parallelism. In doing so, tens of years of industry research has been combined and applied in a myriad of ways. This talk examines PCP's current progress, explicitly relating it to specific research of the past and present, in addition to surveying future efforts and possible research opportunities.

http://norfolk.cs.washington.edu/htbin-post/unrestricted/colloq/details.cgi?id=768

<WMV - streaming, WMV - download, ...>

If you're not aware of the work we're doing in Visual Studio 2010 -- both in .NET 4.0 and C++ -- this talk gives a pretty good overview of all of it.  It has a researchy feel to it, with plenty of pointers to interesting prior research that has influenced our work along the way.

10/31/2008 3:10:58 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #   

 

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