Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!samsung!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!wuarchive!emory!hubcap!Steven From: zenith@ensmp.fr (Steven Ericsson Zenith) Newsgroups: comp.parallel Subject: European list Message-ID: <12669@hubcap.clemson.edu> Date: 17 Jan 91 20:42:54 GMT Sender: fpst@hubcap.clemson.edu Lines: 42 Approved: parallel@hubcap.clemson.edu In-Reply-To: Steve Stevenson's message of Thu, 17 Jan 91 12:58:14 -0500 <9101171758.AA15730@hubcap.clemson.edu> From: pratt@cs.stanford.edu; ... Whoever gets the upper hand in concurrent software will get the upper hand in concurrent computing. While I don't think Steven is intentionally pulling the wool over our eyes, the Europeans are so far ahead of the US in concurrent software that in ten years time they will be the ones dictating terms to the hardware companies in the US. I should make it clear that the technology and resource in high performance computing to which I refer is hardware. The availability of transputer systems (amoung other things) over the past 5-6 yrs has enabled European researchers in concurrency to reach a reasonable understanding of the subject. That I'll admit - though I find it hard to be as full of praise as Vaughan. 5 years ago parallel processing in the USA was strictly a minority sport. It entertains many an ex-INMOSian (this one included) to see parts of INTEL now selling the same philosophy as INMOS did 6 years ago. Having just spent a year in the USA - and having seen first hand the wealth of current high performance computing resource - and noting the advanced stages of high performance microprocessor development (i870, iWARP, AT&T, TI etc..) and routing technology on which future HPC machines will be based. And noting the High Performance Computing Initiative which will charge future "Grand Challenge" research with funds, along side the emergence of companies such as SGI and others in the parallel computing "market". Being aware of the self-interest and bickering that haunts ESPRIT funding - which, frankly, is being diverted into projects to support outdated technology in the cause of political expediancy - then if Europe currently has an advantage in this respect it will surely be a short lived one. Steven -- Steven Ericsson Zenith * Email: zenith@ensmp.fr * Fax:(1)64.69.47.09 | Francais:(1)64.69.47.08 | Office:(1)64.69.48.52 CAII Ecole Nationale Superieure des Mines de Paris 35 rue Saint-Honore 77305 Fontainebleau France "All see beauty as beauty only because they see ugliness" LaoTzu