
Internal hardware of a computer. (Photo © openphoto.net. Used with permission.)
Instructor(s)
Dr. Joel Emer
Prof. Krste Asanovic
Prof. Arvind
(Lecturer)
MIT Course Number
6.823
As Taught In
Fall 2005
Level
Graduate
Course Description
Course Features
- Lecture notes
- Assignments: problem sets (no solutions)
- Assignments: programming (no examples)
- Exams (no solutions)
Course Description
6.823 is a course in the department's "Computer Systems and Architecture" concentration. 6.823 is a study of the evolution of computer architecture and the factors influencing the design of hardware and software elements of computer systems. Topics may include: instruction set design; processor micro-architecture and pipelining; cache and virtual memory organizations; protection and sharing; I/O and interrupts; in-order and out-of-order superscalar architectures; VLIW machines; vector supercomputers; multithreaded architectures; symmetric multiprocessors; and parallel computers.