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  2. Parallel Virtual Machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallel_Virtual_Machine

    Parallel Virtual Machine (PVM) is a software tool for parallel networking of computers. It is designed to allow a network of heterogeneous Unix and/or Windows machines to be used as a single distributed parallel processor. [2] Thus large computational problems can be solved more cost effectively by using the aggregate power and memory of many ...

  3. Parallels Workstation Extreme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallels_Workstation_Extreme

    Parallels Workstation Extreme includes support for up to 16 CPU cores, 64 GB of RAM for guest OSs, 16 virtual network adapters per virtual machine and virtual drive sizes up to 2 TB. Users can use multiple monitors, display a different guest operating system in each screen and also move the mouse back and forth between monitors and OSs.

  4. MUMPS (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MUMPS_(software)

    MUMPS (MUltifrontal Massively Parallel sparse direct Solver) is a software application for the solution of large sparse systems of linear algebraic equations on distributed memory parallel computers. It was developed in European project PARASOL (1996–1999) by CERFACS , IRIT - ENSEEIHT and RAL .

  5. OpenMP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenMP

    OpenMP (Open Multi-Processing) is an application programming interface (API) that supports multi-platform shared-memory multiprocessing programming in C, C++, and Fortran, [3] on many platforms, instruction-set architectures and operating systems, including Solaris, AIX, FreeBSD, HP-UX, Linux, macOS, and Windows.

  6. Parallels Workstation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallels_Workstation

    Parallels Workstation is the first commercial software product released by Parallels, Inc., a developer of desktop and server virtualization software.The Workstation software comprises a virtual machine suite for Intel x86-compatible computers (running Microsoft Windows or Linux) (for Mac version, see Parallels Desktop for Mac) which allows the simultaneous creation and execution of multiple ...

  7. Parallel computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallel_computing

    Parallel computers can be roughly classified according to the level at which the hardware supports parallelism, with multi-core and multi-processor computers having multiple processing elements within a single machine, while clusters, MPPs, and grids use multiple computers to work on the same task. Specialized parallel computer architectures ...

  8. Intel Parallel Studio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_Parallel_Studio

    Intel Parallel Studio XE was a software development product developed by Intel that facilitated native code development on Windows, macOS and Linux in C++ and Fortran for parallel computing. [2] Parallel programming enables software programs to take advantage of multi-core processors from Intel and other processor vendors.

  9. QEMU - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QEMU

    For user-mode emulation, QEMU maps emulated threads to host threads. QEMU can run a host thread for each emulated virtual CPU (vCPU) for full system emulation. This depends on the guest being updated to support parallel system emulation, currently ARM, Alpha, HP-PA, PowerPC, RISC-V, s390x, x86, and Xtensa.