Difference between revisions of "Matteo Frigo"

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* [[Matteo Frigo]] ('''1999'''). ''Portable High-Performance Programs''. Ph.D. thesis, [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology|MIT]], Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, [http://supertech.csail.mit.edu/papers/frigo-phd-thesis.pdf pdf]
 
* [[Matteo Frigo]] ('''1999'''). ''Portable High-Performance Programs''. Ph.D. thesis, [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology|MIT]], Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, [http://supertech.csail.mit.edu/papers/frigo-phd-thesis.pdf pdf]
 
* [[Matteo Frigo]] ('''1999'''). ''A Fast Fourier Transform Compiler''. [[ACM#SIGPLAN|ACM SIGPLAN'99]], [http://supertech.csail.mit.edu/papers/pldi99.pdf pdf]
 
* [[Matteo Frigo]] ('''1999'''). ''A Fast Fourier Transform Compiler''. [[ACM#SIGPLAN|ACM SIGPLAN'99]], [http://supertech.csail.mit.edu/papers/pldi99.pdf pdf]
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* [[Matteo Frigo]], [[Charles Leiserson]], [[Harald Prokop]], [https://dblp.uni-trier.de/pers/hd/r/Ramachandran:Sridhar Sridhar Ramachandran] ('''1999'''). ''Cache-Oblivious Algorithms''. [https://dblp.uni-trier.de/db/conf/focs/focs99.html FOCS 99]
 
==2000 ...==
 
==2000 ...==
 
* [[Matteo Frigo]], [[Mathematician#SGJohnson|Steven G. Johnson]] ('''2005'''). ''The Design and Implementation of FFTW3''. Proceedings of the [[IEEE]], [http://www.fftw.org/fftw-paper-ieee.pdf pdf]
 
* [[Matteo Frigo]], [[Mathematician#SGJohnson|Steven G. Johnson]] ('''2005'''). ''The Design and Implementation of FFTW3''. Proceedings of the [[IEEE]], [http://www.fftw.org/fftw-paper-ieee.pdf pdf]

Latest revision as of 12:02, 14 November 2018

Home * People * Matteo Frigo

Matteo Frigo [1]

Matteo Frigo,
an Italian computer scientist and software architect at Oracle, Boston area. Matteo Frigo received his Ph.D. in 1999 from the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Massachusetts Institute of Technology under Charles Leiserson, where he was member of the teams in developing *Socrates [2] and the CilkChess [3] computer chess programs. His research spans around parallel computing, SIMD parallelism, on FFT where he along with Steven G. Johnson co-developed FFTW, DSP, cache-oblivious algorithms, and theory of computation. In 2007 Matteo Frigo co-founded Cilk Arts, Inc., a start-up developing Cilk technology for multi-core computing applications, which was acquired by Intel in August 2009 [4] [5].

Selected Publications

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External Links

References

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