Path: utzoo!mnetor!uunet!husc6!cmcl2!grob From: grob@cmcl2.NYU.EDU (Lori S. Grob) Newsgroups: comp.arch Subject: comp.parallel Message-ID: <22990@cmcl2.NYU.EDU> Date: 8 Feb 88 03:01:27 GMT Organization: New York University, Ultracomputer Research Lab Lines: 37 (I am reposting this because I accidently deleted the 1st line, do not respond to me I am posting for a friend - Lori) Steve Stevenson (the Moderator) writes in comp.hypercube: > I think that Eugene Miya's is important from two standpoints. > @ For the non-technician, the term "hypercube" has taken on a > generic meaning - like "kleenix" for a tissue. > @ For the technical folks, the term is a specific communications > topology. > Both distinctions serve a purpose. I would submit that the problems > of interest (to the newsgroup) are independent of the topology. > Locally, we're calling things like the CM and the T-series > "network connected." This avoids any committment to any theology. Perhaps this explains the low volume of correspondence in the hypercube newsgroup. Since it calls itself "hypercube" and claims to be "independent of topology" then its intended audience must be non-technicians. Technicians do not contribute because they perceive this to be a forum for discussing hypercube theology. For instance, Eugene Miya chooses to post his "Parallel Processing top ten" references (which includes references to hypercubes BTW) in comp.arch, rather than comp.hypercube. I am tired of wading through the notes in comp.arch to find those concerning parallel processing. (And I'm sure that those subscribers to comp.arch who are interested in architectures are tired of the newsgroup being misused for this purpose.) I cannot understand why the hypercube newsgroup stubbornly clings to its (as pointed out by the moderator) inappropriate name. Susan Flynn flynn@acf2.nyu.edu