Site Navigation
Categories:
Computer architecture
Central processing unit

Summary Of: Computer architecture

A typical vision of a computer architecture as a series of abstraction layers... A typical vision of a computer architecture as a series of abstraction layers... A typical vision of a computer architecture as a series of... Computer architecture comprises at least three main subcategories... Some practitioners of computer architecture at companies such as Intel and AMD use more fine distinctions...

Encyclodia Page On: Computer architecture

These Are Links To Other Documents
A typical vision of a computer architecture as a series of abstraction layers: hardware, firmware, assembler, kernel, operating system and applications (see also Tanenbaum 79). | | abstraction layers | hardware | firmware | assembler | kernel | operating system | applications | computer engineering | computer | blueprint | central processing unit | addresses in memory | Instruction set architecture | machine language | assembly language | instruction set | memory address modes | processor registers | Microarchitecture | cache | computer buses | memory controllers | direct memory access | multi-processing | hardware | design engineering | CPUs | CPU design | cluster computing | Non-Uniform Memory Access | machine language | personal computers | clock speed | execute multiple instructions per clock cycle | functional units | bus | Interrupt latency | pipelining | real-time | I/O bound | memory bound | Benchmarking | Intel Core 2 | use cases | Computer hardware | CPU design | Orthogonal instruction set | Software architecture | Computer organization | Von Neumann architecture | ISBN 1558605967 | ISBN 0849326915 | ISBN 978-0-12-370490-0 | Tanenbaum, Andrew S. | Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey | ISBN 0-13-148521-0 | v | d | Digital | Logic gate | digital circuit | integrated circuit | Boolean logic | digital signal processing | Audio | Photography | Video | Categories | Computer architecture | Central processing unit |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Computer architecture".