K
Kemal Ebcioglu
Researcher at IBM
Publications - 70
Citations - 4687
Kemal Ebcioglu is an academic researcher from IBM. The author has contributed to research in topics: Very long instruction word & Compiler. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 68 publications receiving 4605 citations. Previous affiliations of Kemal Ebcioglu include University at Buffalo.
Papers
More filters
Proceedings ArticleDOI
X10: an object-oriented approach to non-uniform cluster computing
Philippe Charles,Christian Grothoff,Vijay Saraswat,Christopher Michael Donawa,Allan H. Kielstra,Kemal Ebcioglu,Christoph von Praun,Vivek Sarkar +7 more
TL;DR: A modern object-oriented programming language, X10, is designed for high performance, high productivity programming of NUCC systems and an overview of the X10 programming model and language, experience with the reference implementation, and results from some initial productivity comparisons between the X 10 and Java™ languages are presented.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
DAISY: dynamic compilation for 100% architectural compatibility
Kemal Ebcioglu,Erik R. Altman +1 more
TL;DR: The architectural requirements for such a VLIW, to deal with issues including self-modifying code, precise exceptions, and aggressive reordering of memory references in the presence of strong MP consistency and memory mapped I/O are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Programming by sketching for bit-streaming programs
TL;DR: StreamBit is developed as a sketching methodology for the important class of bit-streaming programs (e.g., coding and cryptography), which allows a programmer to write clean and portable reference code, and then obtain a high-quality implementation by simply sketching the outlines of the desired implementation.
Journal ArticleDOI
Dynamic binary translation and optimization
TL;DR: Different design trade-offs in the DAISY system and their impact on final system performance are reported, and the results show high degrees of instruction parallelism with reasonable translation overhead and memory usage.
Proceedings Article
An Expert System for Harmonizing Four-Part Chorales
TL;DR: The economy and elegance of the formal representation underlying these musical styles (which are not in the least less respectable than traditional styles of music), may often have an aesthetic appeal in and of themselves as discussed by the authors.