Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hierarchical_INTegration> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 21 of
21
with 100 items per page.
- Hierarchical_INTegration abstract "Hierarchical INTegration, or HINT for short, is a computer benchmark that ranks a computer system as a whole (i.e. the entire computer instead of individual components). It measures the full range of performance, mostly based on the amount of work a computer can perform over time. A system with a very fast processor would likely be rated poorly if the buses were very poor compared to those of another system that had both an average processor and average buses. For example, in the past, Macintosh computers with relatively slow processor speeds (800 MHz) used to perform better than x86 based systems with processors running at nearly 2 GHz.HINT is widely known for being almost immune to artificial optimization. HINT can be used by many computers ranging from a calculator to a supercomputer. It was developed at the U.S. Department of Energy's Ames Laboratory and is licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public License.".
- Hierarchical_INTegration wikiPageExternalLink hint.tar.gz.
- Hierarchical_INTegration wikiPageExternalLink Inquiry,winter1995.html.
- Hierarchical_INTegration wikiPageID "1081948".
- Hierarchical_INTegration wikiPageRevisionID "543715312".
- Hierarchical_INTegration hasPhotoCollection Hierarchical_INTegration.
- Hierarchical_INTegration subject Category:Computer_benchmarks.
- Hierarchical_INTegration type Abstraction100002137.
- Hierarchical_INTegration type Benchmark107261143.
- Hierarchical_INTegration type ComputerBenchmarks.
- Hierarchical_INTegration type Measure100033615.
- Hierarchical_INTegration type Standard107260623.
- Hierarchical_INTegration type SystemOfMeasurement113577171.
- Hierarchical_INTegration comment "Hierarchical INTegration, or HINT for short, is a computer benchmark that ranks a computer system as a whole (i.e. the entire computer instead of individual components). It measures the full range of performance, mostly based on the amount of work a computer can perform over time. A system with a very fast processor would likely be rated poorly if the buses were very poor compared to those of another system that had both an average processor and average buses.".
- Hierarchical_INTegration label "Hierarchical INTegration".
- Hierarchical_INTegration sameAs m.044dmq.
- Hierarchical_INTegration sameAs Q17027433.
- Hierarchical_INTegration sameAs Q17027433.
- Hierarchical_INTegration sameAs Hierarchical_INTegration.
- Hierarchical_INTegration wasDerivedFrom Hierarchical_INTegration?oldid=543715312.
- Hierarchical_INTegration isPrimaryTopicOf Hierarchical_INTegration.