default search action
SICME 1973: USA
- Stephen R. Kimbleton, J. D. Madden, Tad B. Pinkerton:
Proceedings of the 1973 ACM SIGME Symposium, SIGME 1973, USA, 1973. ACM 1973, ISBN 978-1-4503-7942-7 - Erol Gelenbe, Paolo Tiberio, J. C. A. Boekhorst:
Page size in demand-paging systems. 1-12 - Samuel H. Fuller:
Performance of an I/O channel with multiple paging drums. 13-21 - Jon C. Strauss:
An analytic model of the HASP execution task monitor. 22-28 - T. Clark Pewitt, Stanley Y. W. Su:
Resource demanded paging and dispatching to optimize resource utilization in an operating system. 29-36 - Alan Jay Smith:
A performance analysis of multiple channel controllers. 37-46 - Akira Sekino:
Throughput analysis of multiprogrammed virtual-memory computer systems. 47-53 - Hisashi Kobayashi:
Application of the diffusion approximation to queuing networks: Part I Equilibrium queue distributions. 54-62 - M. J. Bennett:
A virtual evaluation tool for a system having a virtualizeable processor. 63-68 - Experiments & measurements in computing. 69-72
- Stephen R. Ruth:
Using business concepts to evaluate large multi-level business systems - some applied techniques. 73-77 - Measurement of lawrence livermore laboratory CDC-7600 SYSTEM PERFORMANCE. 78-99
- R. T. Rozwadowski, Kenneth W. Kolence:
A measure for the quantity of computation. 100-111 - David E. Morgan, J. A. Campbell:
An answer to a user's plea? 112-120 - Brian W. Kernighan, Patricia A. Hamilton:
Synthetically generated performance test loads for operating systems. 121-126 - Gerald Waldbaum:
Evaluating computing system changes by means of regression models. 127-135 - Marshall D. Abrams, George E. Lindamood, Thomas N. Pyke Jr.:
Measuring and modelling man-computer interaction. 136-142 - Gary J. Silverman, R. N. Sauer:
A sensor-based programmed monitor system. 143-146 - Madeline J. Bauer, John W. McCredie:
AMS: A software monitor for performance evaluation and system control. 147-160 - Edmund L. Burke:
A computer architecture for system performance monitoring. 161-169
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.