| Carl Bartlett, Neal Sample, and Matt Haines "Pipeline Expansion in Coordinated Applications", 1999. |
....to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and or a fee. SAC 2002, Madrid, Spain 2002 ACM 1 58113 445 2 03 03 5.00. passing, threading, rendezvous, etc. Asynchrony as a tool to delay or reorder result extraction is well understood and widely used [12, 13]. 1.2.2 Partial Extraction Partial extraction of data results has become almost ubiquitous with the advent of web browsing. There are examples of other extraction models (such as the progressive extraction of results) that have seen limited use in specialized arenas. We can also envision other ....
....as adaptive mesh refinements, answers become better (e.g. more precise) over time. It can be very important to extract results as progress is made toward an acceptable solution for steering, early termination, or other reasons. A typical application of this type is the design of an aircraft wing [2, 3, 5, 12]. Certain scientific and mathematical processes, like Newtons method of successive approximation for roots of an equation, can also utilize this type of extraction [4] The traditional RPC result extraction model does not lend itself well to progressive extractions. 1.2.4 Summary Decomposition ....
C. Bartlett, et al., Pipeline Expansion in Coordinated Applications, International Conference on Parallel and Distributed Processing Techniques and Applications (PDPTA 99), June 1999.
....protecting their proprietary interests in the service. Also, under the CHAIMS model, service updates can be performed in a central location and not need to be propagated to end users. Clients also gain from this model in that they can access services that they don t have to develop or maintain [12]. Many clients do not have the resources to develop sophisticated software or purchase the high end machinery necessary to accomplish their tasks. For example, suppose a small university s genomic research lab had a digitized DNA sequence from which they wanted to isolate a certain gene. Instead ....
....when services are not under the client s control. Access to an array of services provides many opportunities for service composition. The ability to compose services is an especially powerful tool for multi disciplinary projects where no single client has expertise in all sub problem areas [12]. By allowing for composition of existing modules, researchers can devote less effort to software development and more time to central research questions. But there is a pitfall: distributed services are not under the control of the client. This means that estimates for job completion time may be ....
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Carl Bartlett, Neal Sample, and Matt Haines "Pipeline Expansion in Coordinated Applications", 1999.
....that must. Asynchronous result extraction has been used even in many sequential computing languages like Java and Ada, and is enabled in various ways, through message passing, threading, rendezvous, etc. Asynchrony as a tool to delay or reorder result extraction is well understood and widely used [12, 13]. Partial extraction of data results has become almost ubiquitous with the advent of web browsing. There are examples of other extraction models (such as the progressive extraction of results) that have seen limited use in specialized arenas. We can also envision other models encompassing some of ....
....adaptive mesh refinements, answers become better (e.g. more precise) over time. It can be very important to extract results as progress is made toward an acceptable solution for steering, early termination, or other reasons. A typical application of this type is the design of an aircraft wing [2, 3, 5, 12]. Certain scientific and mathematical processes, like Newton s method of successive approximation for roots of an equation, can also utilize this type of extraction [4] The traditional RPC result extraction model does not lend itself well to progressive extractions. Decomposition of the ....
C. Bartlett, M. Haines, and N. Sample: "Pipeline Expansion in Coordinated Applications," International Conference on Parallel and Distributed Processing Techniques and Applications (PDPTA'99), June 1999.
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