units
FIT3143
Faculty of Information Technology
This unit entry is for students who completed this unit in 2013 only. For students planning to study the unit, please refer to the unit indexes in the the current edition of the Handbook. If you have any queries contact the managing faculty for your course or area of study.
To find units available for enrolment in the current year, you must make sure you use the indexes and browse unit tool in the current edition of the Handbook.
Level | Undergraduate |
Faculty | Faculty of Information Technology |
Offered | Clayton First semester 2013 (Day) |
Modern computer systems contain parallelism in both hardware and software. This unit covers parallelism in both general purpose and application specific computer architectures and the programming paradigms that allow parallelism to be exploited in software. The unit examines both shared memory and message passing paradigms in both hardware and software; concurrency, multithreading and synchronicity; parallel, clustered and distributed supercomputing models, languages and software tools and development environments. Students will program in these paradigms.
At the completion of this unit students will have -
A knowledge and understanding of:
concurrency, synchronicity and parallelism;
An appreciation of:
Developed skills in:
Examination (3 hours): 50%; In-semester assessment: 50%
2 hrs lectures/wk, 2 hr laboratory/wk, 1 hr tutorial/wk
FIT4001, CSE4333