Supercomputers: Directions in Technology and Applications
Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1989. First? Edition. First? Printing. Wraps. 23 cm, 102, wraps, figures, tables, some wear to cover and spine edges. More
Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1989. First? Edition. First? Printing. Wraps. 23 cm, 102, wraps, figures, tables, some wear to cover and spine edges. More
Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1994. Trade paperback. xiii, 270 p. Illustrations. Notes and References. Bibliography. More
Gaithersburg, MD: Defense Computer Security Center and Institute of Computer Science and Technology of the National Bureau of Standards, 1985. Presumed First Edition, First printing thus. Brochure. 20 pages plus covers (includes conference and hotel registration postcards). Staple holes. Format is 4 inches by 9.25 inches. Conference brochure. Some writing to text. Mailing information and postage on back cover. This is the eighth in a series of conferences co-sponsored by the DoD Computer Security Center and the National Bureau of Standards. The theme of this year's conference is, "Computer Security in the National Arena." The program is directed toward the users as well as the developers of computer security products, and includes presentations on the efforts of the Department of. Defense and National Bureau of Standards, of trusted product researchers and developers, and of the private sector. The specific topics this year include secure networks, verification, assurance, formal models, security architecture, sanitization, applications on secure bases, labeling, a profile of hackers, performance tuning of secure products, and market analysis of secure products. More
Gaithersburg, MD: Defense Computer Security Center and Institute of Computer Science and Technology of the National Bureau of Standards, 1985. Presumed First Edition, First printing thus. Ephemera. 14 pages plus covers--Conference agenda. Stapled in upper left corner. Format is 8,5 inches by 11 inches. Some writing noted. Together with a two page listing of National Computer Security Center Documents. Together with a 28 pages (14 sheet) Vendors Conference Registration. In folder. This was the eighth in a series of conferences co-sponsored by the DoD Computer Security Center and the National Bureau of Standards. The theme of the conference was, "Computer Security in the National Arena." The program is directed toward the users as well as the developers of computer security products, and includes presentations on the efforts of the Department of. Defense and National Bureau of Standards, of trusted product researchers, developers, and the private sector. The topics this year include secure networks, verification, assurance, formal models, security architecture, sanitization, applications on secure bases, labeling, hackers, performance tuning of secure products, and market analysis of secure products. More
Washington D.C. The National Academies Press, 2003. Presumed First Edition, First printing. Trade paperback. xii, 46 pages. Footnotes. Acronyms. Cover has slight wear and soling. The committee assessed the status of supercomputing in the United States, including the characteristics of relevant systems and architecture research in government, industry, and academia and the characteristics of the market. The committee examined key elements of context--the history of supercomputing, research investment, the needs of government agencies for supercomputing capabilities--and assessed options for progress. Key historical or causal factors were identified. The committee examined the changing nature of problems demanding supercomputing (e.g., weapons design, modeling and simulation, cryptanalysis, climate modeling) and the implications for systems design. This is its interim report. More
Washington DC: The National Academies, Computer Science and Telecommunications Board, 2003. Presumed First Edition, First printing. Velobound. Various paginations. Illustrations. Footnotes. Tabbed sections. This appears to be preparatory material to the workshop. It includes Administrative Information and 17 white papers. The principal authors are: Cleve Ashcraft (Livermore), Phillip Colella (Berkeley), Michael Colvin (Livermore), Stephen Eubank (Los Alamos), Bruce Hendrickson (Sandia), Gary Hughes (NSA), David Keyes (Columbia), John Killough (Landmark Graphics), Richard Loft (National Center for Atmospheric Research), Charles Macmillan (Livermore--later Director of Los Alamos?), Gene Myers (Berkeley), Jeffrey Saltzman (Merck), Vincent Scarafino (Ford), William Tang (Princeton), Warren Washington (National Center for Atmospheric Research), Robert Weaver (Los Alamos), and Paul Woodward (University of Minnesota). More