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Modern Computer Architecture and Organization

Modern Computer Architecture and Organization - Third Edition

By : Jim Ledin
5 (1)
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Modern Computer Architecture and Organization

Modern Computer Architecture and Organization

5 (1)
By: Jim Ledin

Overview of this book

Computer architecture now extends far beyond CPUs, forming the foundation of cloud platforms, AI systems, cybersecurity solutions, and emerging computing technologies. Modern Computer Architecture and Organization, Third Edition, provides a clear, end-to-end understanding of how today’s computer systems are built and why architectural decisions matter more than ever. You’ll begin with the fundamentals of digital logic, processor elements, memory systems, and the hardware–software interface, building a strong grounding that remains essential for every architect and systems engineer. Next, the book explores modern processor and memory architectures, performance-enhancing techniques, virtualization, and mainstream instruction sets, including x86, ARM, and an in-depth treatment of RISC-V. New and significantly expanded chapters extend this foundation into modern computing domains, including AI and large language model (LLM) computing platforms, GPUs, cloud-scale systems, confidential and security-focused architectures, blockchain and Bitcoin mining systems, self-driving vehicle architectures, and future directions such as quantum computing. This edition reflects today’s AI-driven, cloud-centric, security-aware computing landscape while remaining true to the classical principles that continue to underpin modern computer systems.
Table of Contents (28 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Fundamentals of Computer Architecture
8
Part 2: Processor Architectures and Instruction Sets
15
Part 3: Computer System Architectures
23
Part 4: Appendices
27
Index

Electrical circuits

This chapter does not assume any prior knowledge of electrical circuits or electronics. We begin with a brief review of the properties of electrical circuits. Conductive materials, such as copper and other metals, exhibit the ability to easily produce an electric current in the presence of an electric field. Non-conductive materials, such as glass, rubber, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC), inhibit the flow of electricity so thoroughly that they are used as insulators to protect electrical conductors from short circuits.

In metals, electrical current consists of electrons in motion. Materials that permit some electrical current to flow while predictably restricting the amount that can flow are used to construct resistors.

The relationship between electrical current, voltage, and resistance in a circuit is analogous to the relationship between flow rate, pressure, and flow restriction in a hydraulic system. Consider a kitchen water faucet: pressure in the pipe leading to...

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Modern Computer Architecture and Organization
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