DocumentCode
964244
Title
Computer Networks
Author
Bell, C.G. ; Habermann, A.N. ; McCredie, J. ; Rutledge, R. ; Wulf, W.
Author_Institution
Camegie Mellon-University
Volume
3
Issue
5
fYear
1970
Firstpage
13
Lastpage
23
Abstract
Computer networks have the ability to bring the power of large machines to work on a single problem and to provide reliable computer services to large populations. They also may become an unmanageable structure that can cripple itself in a fashion akin to the great Northeast power failure in 1965. Imagine the following sequence: computer X does not have the sine subprogram but relies on computer Y for it; computer Y on the other hand solves the sine subprogram using the cosine subprogram which it doesn´t have; computer Y therefore calls X for a cosine; X solves for cosine using sine which it asks Y for.& Of course, you say, no computer network would be so simplistic. But would you guarantee it could never happen for any set of computer resources among N computers-and that the network might not head for the buried recursive disaster like a lemming for a cliff?
Keywords
Computer architecture; Computer networks;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Computer
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9162
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/C-M.1970.216702
Filename
1641336
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