Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"The MATSim project started with Kai Nagel, then at ETH Zurich, and his interest in improving his work with, and for, the TRansportation ANalysis and SIMulation System (TRANSIMS) project; he also wanted to make the resulting code open-source.
OpenTitan is under the stewardship of lowRISC and collaboratively developed by Google, ETH Zurich, Nuvoton, G+D Mobile Security, Seagate, and Western Digital. [4] The OpenTitan source code is available on GitHub, released under the permissive Apache 2 license.
Around 2010, the computer science department at ETH Zurich began exploring active objects and concurrency for operating systems, and has released an early version of a new language Active Oberon and a new operating system for it, first named Active Object System (AOS) in 2002, [5] then due to trademark issues, renamed Bluebottle in 2005, then ...
Barrelfish is an experimental computer operating system built by ETH Zurich with the assistance of Microsoft Research in Cambridge. [1] [2] [3] It is an experimental operating system designed from the ground up for scalability for computers built with multi-core processors with the goal of reducing the compounding decrease in benefit as more CPUs are used in a computer by putting low-level ...
Oberon was developed as part of the implementation of an operating system, also named Oberon at ETH Zurich in Switzerland. The name was inspired both by the Voyager space probe's pictures of the moon of the planet Uranus , named Oberon , and because Oberon is famous as the king of the elves.
Multibody research group, Center of Mechanics, ETH Zurich. Lehrstuhl für angewandte Mechanik TU Munich. BiPoP Team, INRIA Rhone-Alpes, France, Siconos software. An open-source software dedicated to the modeling and the simulation or nonsmooth dynamical systems, especially mechanical systems with contact and Coulomb's friction
The software project, originally named Opencast Matterhorn due to a meeting at ETH Zurich, saw 13 institutions from North America and Europe build a free, open-source software to produce, manage and distribute academic audio and video content, with a focus on lecture recordings.
Modula-2 is a structured, procedural programming language developed between 1977 and 1985/8 by Niklaus Wirth at ETH Zurich. It was created as the language for the operating system and application software of the Lilith personal workstation. [1] It was later used for programming outside the context of the Lilith.