Kirk L. Kroeker "Technology, too, obeys the law of responding, of answering a call at whose origin we are encountering so much static." -- Avital Ronell

 
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A Breakthrough in Algorithm Design

By Kirk L. Kroeker

Computer scientists at Carnegie Mellon University have devised an algorithm that might be able to solve a certain class of linear systems much more quickly than today’s fastest solvers.

Systems of linear equations are everywhere. They are used in telecommunications, transportation, manufacturing, and many other domains. The algorithms used to solve linear systems must be able to compute solutions to equations involving millions—or sometimes billions—of variables. Because calculating solutions for these systems is time-consuming on even the fastest computers, finding ways to accelerate these computations is an ongoing challenge for algorithm designers. Now, a group of computer scientists at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) has devised an algorithm that the researchers say might be able to solve a certain class of linear systems much more quickly than today’s fastest solvers.

(This article appeared in CACM, vol. 54, no. 9, September 2011, pp. 13-15.)

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A Breakthrough in Algorithm Design

 


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