{"title":"以建筑之名","authors":"S. Dasgupta","doi":"10.1093/oso/9780190843861.003.0007","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"When Caxton Foster of the University of Massachusetts published his book Computer Architecture in 1970, this term was only just being recognized, reluctantly, by the computing community. This despite an influential paper published in 1964 by a group of IBM engineers on the “Architecture of the IBM System/360.” For instance, ACM’s “Curriculum 68” made no mention of the term in its elaborate description of the entire scope of computing as an academic discipline. Rather, in the late 1960s and well into the ’70s terms such as computer organization, computer structures, logical organization, computer systems organization, or, most blandly, computer design were preferred to describe computers in an abstract sort of way, independent of the physical (hardware) details. Thus a widely referenced paper by Michael Flynn of Stanford University, published in 1974, was titled “Trends and Problems in Computer Organization.” And Maurice Wilkes, even in the third edition of his Time-Sharing Computer Systems (1975) declined to use the term computer architecture. Yet, computer architecture as both an abstract way of looking at, understanding, and designing computers, and as a field of computer science emerged in the first years of the ’70s. The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) founded a Technical Committee on Computer Architecture (TCCA) in 1970 to join the ranks of other specialist IEEE TCs. The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) followed suit in 1971 by establishing, alongside other special-interest groups, the Special Interest Group on Computer Architecture (SIGARCH). And in 1974, the first of what came to be the annual International Symposium on Computer Architecture (ISCA) was held in Gainesville, Florida. By the end of the decade a series of significant textbooks and articles bearing the term computer architecture(s) had appeared. The reason for naming an aspect of the computer its “architecture” and the reason for naming an academic and research discipline “computer architecture” can be traced back to the mid-1940s and the paradigm-shaping unpublished reports by John von Neumann of the Institute of Advanced Study, Princeton, and his collaborators, Arthur Burks and Herman Goldstine.","PeriodicalId":133335,"journal":{"name":"The Second Age of Computer Science","volume":"16 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-07-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"In The Name Of Architecture\",\"authors\":\"S. 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Thus a widely referenced paper by Michael Flynn of Stanford University, published in 1974, was titled “Trends and Problems in Computer Organization.” And Maurice Wilkes, even in the third edition of his Time-Sharing Computer Systems (1975) declined to use the term computer architecture. Yet, computer architecture as both an abstract way of looking at, understanding, and designing computers, and as a field of computer science emerged in the first years of the ’70s. The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) founded a Technical Committee on Computer Architecture (TCCA) in 1970 to join the ranks of other specialist IEEE TCs. The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) followed suit in 1971 by establishing, alongside other special-interest groups, the Special Interest Group on Computer Architecture (SIGARCH). And in 1974, the first of what came to be the annual International Symposium on Computer Architecture (ISCA) was held in Gainesville, Florida. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
当马萨诸塞大学的Caxton Foster在1970年出版他的《计算机体系结构》一书时,这个术语才刚刚被计算机界勉强认可。1964年,一群IBM工程师发表了一篇颇具影响力的论文,题目是“IBM System/360的架构”。例如,ACM的“课程68”在详细描述作为一门学术学科的整个计算范围时没有提到这个术语。相反,在20世纪60年代末和70年代,诸如计算机组织、计算机结构、逻辑组织、计算机系统组织,或者最温和地说,计算机设计等术语更倾向于以一种抽象的方式描述计算机,独立于物理(硬件)细节。因此,斯坦福大学的Michael Flynn在1974年发表了一篇被广泛引用的论文,题为“计算机组织的趋势和问题”。莫里斯·威尔克斯甚至在他的《分时计算机系统》(1975)的第三版中也拒绝使用“计算机体系结构”这个术语。然而,计算机体系结构既是一种观察、理解和设计计算机的抽象方式,也是计算机科学的一个领域,它出现在70年代的头几年。电气和电子工程师协会(IEEE)于1970年成立了计算机体系结构技术委员会(TCCA),加入了IEEE其他专业技术委员会的行列。计算机协会(ACM)紧随其后,于1971年与其他特殊兴趣小组一起成立了计算机体系结构特殊兴趣小组(SIGARCH)。1974年,第一届计算机体系结构国际年会(ISCA)在佛罗里达州的盖恩斯维尔举行。到90年代末,出现了一系列带有“计算机体系结构”一词的重要教科书和文章。将计算机的一个方面命名为“体系结构”的原因,以及将一门学术和研究学科命名为“计算机体系结构”的原因,可以追溯到20世纪40年代中期,以及普林斯顿高等研究院的约翰·冯·诺伊曼(John von Neumann)及其合作者亚瑟·伯克斯(Arthur Burks)和赫尔曼·戈德斯坦(Herman Goldstine)撰写的塑造范式的未发表报告。
When Caxton Foster of the University of Massachusetts published his book Computer Architecture in 1970, this term was only just being recognized, reluctantly, by the computing community. This despite an influential paper published in 1964 by a group of IBM engineers on the “Architecture of the IBM System/360.” For instance, ACM’s “Curriculum 68” made no mention of the term in its elaborate description of the entire scope of computing as an academic discipline. Rather, in the late 1960s and well into the ’70s terms such as computer organization, computer structures, logical organization, computer systems organization, or, most blandly, computer design were preferred to describe computers in an abstract sort of way, independent of the physical (hardware) details. Thus a widely referenced paper by Michael Flynn of Stanford University, published in 1974, was titled “Trends and Problems in Computer Organization.” And Maurice Wilkes, even in the third edition of his Time-Sharing Computer Systems (1975) declined to use the term computer architecture. Yet, computer architecture as both an abstract way of looking at, understanding, and designing computers, and as a field of computer science emerged in the first years of the ’70s. The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) founded a Technical Committee on Computer Architecture (TCCA) in 1970 to join the ranks of other specialist IEEE TCs. The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) followed suit in 1971 by establishing, alongside other special-interest groups, the Special Interest Group on Computer Architecture (SIGARCH). And in 1974, the first of what came to be the annual International Symposium on Computer Architecture (ISCA) was held in Gainesville, Florida. By the end of the decade a series of significant textbooks and articles bearing the term computer architecture(s) had appeared. The reason for naming an aspect of the computer its “architecture” and the reason for naming an academic and research discipline “computer architecture” can be traced back to the mid-1940s and the paradigm-shaping unpublished reports by John von Neumann of the Institute of Advanced Study, Princeton, and his collaborators, Arthur Burks and Herman Goldstine.