#104 – David Patterson: Computer Architecture and Data Storage
from Lex Fridman Podcast
by Lex Fridman
Published: Sat Jun 27 2020
Show Notes
David Patterson is a Turing award winner and professor of computer science at Berkeley. He is known for pioneering contributions to RISC processor architecture used by 99% of new chips today and for co-creating RAID storage. The impact that these two lines of research and development have had on our world is immeasurable. He is also one of the great educators of computer science in the world. His book with John Hennessy “Computer Architecture: A Quantitative Approach” is how I first learned about and was humbled by the inner workings of machines at the lowest level.
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Here’s the outline of the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time.
OUTLINE:
– Introduction
– How have computers changed?
– What’s inside a computer?
– Layers of abstraction
– RISC vs CISC computer architectures
– Designing a good instruction set is an art
– Measures of performance
– RISC instruction set
– RISC-V open standard instruction set architecture
– Why do ARM implementations vary?
– Simple is beautiful in instruction set design
– How machine learning changed computers
– Machine learning benchmarks
– Quantum computing
– Moore’s law
– RAID data storage
– Teaching
– Wrestling
– Meaning of life