Henri Bal was the driving force behind the acquisition and use of three large distributed cluster computers called the Distributed ASCI Supercomputer (DAS), a Computer Science Grid with revolutionary Optical Interconnect[8] .
Henri Bal, Robbert van Renesse (1986). Parallel Alpha-Beta Search. 4th NGI-SION Symposium Stimulerende Informatica. Jaarbeurs Utrecht, The Netherlands. April 1986
Henri Bal (1991). Heuristic search in PARLOG using replicated worker style parallelism. Future Generation Computer Systems 6, pp. 303-315. North-Holland.
Henri Bal (1992). A comparative study of five parallel programming languages. Future Generation Computer Systems 8, pp. 121-135. North-Holland.
Henri Bal, Victor Allis (1995). Parallel Retrograde Analysis on a Distributed System. Supercomputing ’95, San Diego, CA.
John Romein, Henri Bal, Jonathan Schaeffer, Aske Plaat (2002). A Performance Analysis of Transposition-Table-Driven Scheduling in Distributed Search. IEEE Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems, Vol. 13, No. 5, pp. 447–459. pdf[16]
John Romein, Henri Bal (2003). Solving the Game of Awari using Parallel Retrograde Analysis. IEEE Computer, Vol. 36, No. 10, pp. 26–33
a Dutch mathematician, computer scientist and Professor at Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam. He is a influential and luminary researcher and authority in parallel computing, computer cluster, parallel programming languages, optimizing compiler and parallel applications. Bal has been a member of over 30 program committees, and as such has had a major impact on the field of parallel computing [1] . Henri Bal received a M.Sc. in Mathematics from the Delft University of Technology in 1982, and Ph.D. in CS [2] in 1989 under the supervision of Andrew S. Tanenbaum. He was visiting researcher at Imperial College, London, University of Arizona, Tucson and Massachusetts Institute of Technology [3]. Along with Robbert van Renesse in 1986, he wrote papers on parallel alpha-beta, with Victor Allis in 1995 on parallel retrograde analysis [4], and in 2002, with his student John Romein, he solved the game of Awari [5] [6] .
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DAS-3
Henri Bal was the driving force behind the acquisition and use of three large distributed cluster computers called the Distributed ASCI Supercomputer (DAS), a Computer Science Grid with revolutionary Optical Interconnect [8] .Books
Selected Publications
[9] [10] [11] [12]1986 ...
1990 ...
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