--: identify 5 journals that I would be interested in reading.
Library
From: Kennedy, K. A survey of dataflow analysis techniques. In Muchnick S, and N. Jones. Program Flow Analysis: Theory and Applications, prentice-Hall, N.J.
U. Banerjee. Dependence Analysis for Supercomputing. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Norwell Mass., 1988
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J. Strikwerda, A probalistic analysis of asyncronous iteration,
from heath, called probiter.pdf
D. Kuck, R. Kuhn, D. Padua, B. Leasure, M.Wolfe: Dependence Graphs and Compiler Optimizations. POPL 1981
W. Blume and R. Eigenman. The Range Test: A dependence test for symbolic, non-linear expression. Proceedings of Supercomputing ‘94. 1994.
P. Petersen and D. Padua. Static and Dynamic Evaluation of Data Dependence Analysis Techniques. IEEE Transations on Parallel and Distributed Systems, Vol 7, No 11, pp 1121-132, Nov 1996.
D. Shasha and M. Snir. Efficient and correct execution of parallel programs that share memory. ACM TOPLAS 10(2). 1988.
might want to lookup projecxtive integrators first.
Title: Projective Methods for Stiff Differential Equations : Problems with Gaps in Their Eigenvalue Spectrum
Networking on the Network. This is a much longer article that I wrote about professional networking for students in PhD? programs. Although most of the detailed instructions are specific to the research world, the underlying philosophy will carry over into the professional world. On the Web at <http://dlis.gseis.ucla.edu/people/pagre/network.html>.
Wayne E. Baker, Networking Smart: How to Build Relationships for Personal and Organizational Success, New York: McGraw? -Hill, 1994. A fairly comprehensive book on the networking process, with greater emphasis than most on strategy.
Peter Block, Flawless Consulting: A Guide to Getting Your Expertise Used, Austin: Learning Concepts, 1981. Though written for management consultants, this book has valuable things to say about the feelings that come up in any kind of professional work, and how to use them honestly for everyone's benefit.
Thomas H. Davenport and Laurence Prusak, What's the Big Idea? Creating and Capitalizing on the Best Management Thinking, Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2003. This is a book about how to go shopping, so to speak, among the ideas that are available in the works of management professors and consultants -- understanding the nature and dynamics of the ideas and choosing the ones that work best for your organization and career.
Donna Fisher and Sandy Vilas, Power Networking, Austin: Mountain Harbour, 1992. This is the best all-around book on the subject of professional neworking. It abstracts a long list of guidelines that apply pretty widely across professions.
Roger Fisher and William Ury, Getting to Yes: Negotating Agreement Without Giving In, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1981. This is the classic book on negotiating. Its core message is that you should negotiate on the basis of interests and not on positions, so that negotiation becomes cooperative problem-solving. If you lead then you'll need these skills.
Ford Harding, Rain Making: The Professional's Guide to Attracting New Clients, Holbrook, MA: Bob Adams, 1994. The way to get ahead is to do something new and tell everyone about it. This is a pretty good introduction to the process, with a focus on publishing an article and developing professional networks.
Linda A. Hill, Becoming a Manager: Mastery of a New Identity, Boston: Harvard Business School, 1992. As a professional you'll have probably a manager, and soon enough you'll probably be a manager yourself. Your job is to deal with these relationships in a mutually beneficial way while also maximizing your own autonomy. This is a study of new managers getting used to their jobs, and it's a good source of insight into these issues.
Robert Jackall, Moral Mazes: The World of Corporate Managers, New York: Oxford University Press, 1988. This is a terrific book about the ethical issues that will surround you in the organizational world. Once you understand these issues, you will see trouble coming much further off, while you can still make your own decisions about it.
Tom Jackson, Guerrilla Tactics in the New Job Market, second edition, New York: Bantam, 1991. This is an excellent book about finding a job; though it is out of print, you can probably find a used copy online. Sending dozens of resumes to personnel departments is one approach, but a much better approach is systematic networking and inside research.
W. Chan Kim and Renee Mauborgne, Blue Ocean Strategy: How to Create Uncontested Market Space and Make the Competition Irrelevant, Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2005. This is a business book that describes several methods for inventing entirely new products and services.
Michael Watkins, The First 90 Days: Critical Success Strategies for New Leaders at All Levels, Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2003. This is a good basic outline of the first things to do when you have been promoted to any sort of managerial job, and most of it applies to any job at all.
“Numerical Linear Albegra Algorithms and Software” by Dongarra, Eijkhou
R.~Barlow and D.~Evans, Synchronous and asynchronous iterative parallel algorithms for linear systems, \emph{Comput.\ J.} 25:56-60, 1982
G.~M.~Baudet, Asynchronous iterative methods for multiprocessors, \emph{J.\ ACM} 25:226-244, 1978
D.~Chazan and W.~L.~Miranker, Chaotic relaxation, \emph{Linear Algebra Appl.} 2:199-222, 1969
Bosilca, G., Chen, Z., Dongarra, J., Langou, J.: Recovery patterns for iterative methods in a parallel unstable environment. Submitted to SIAM Journal on Scientific Computing (2005
von Eicken, T., Culler, D.E., Goldstein, S.C., Schauser, K.E.: Active Messages: A mechanism for integrated communication and computation. In: 19th International Symposium on Computer Architecture, Gold Coast, Australia (1992) 256–266
Chazan, D., Miranker, M.: Chaotic relaxation. Linear Algebra and its Applications 2 (1969) 199–222
Baudet, G.M.: Asynchronous iterative methods for multiprocessors. Journal of the ACM 25 (1978) 226–244
Liu, G.R.: Mesh Free Methods: Moving beyond the Finite Element Method. CRC Press (2002)
G. Zheng, A. K. Singla, J. M. Unger, and L. V. Kale, “A Parallel-Object Programming Model for Petaflops Machines and Blue Gene/Cyclops”, Proceedings of IPDPS 2002, April 2002.