The first inspiration for cluster computing was developed in the 1960s by IBM as an alternative of linking large mainframes to provide a more cost effective form of commercial parallelism [1]. At that time, IBM's Houston Automatic Spooling Priority (HASP) system and its successor, Job Entry System (JES) allowed the distribution of work to a user-constructed mainframe cluster. IBM still supports clustering of
CITATION STYLE
Yeo, C. S., Buyya, R., Pourreza, H., Eskicioglu, R., Graham, P., & Sommers, F. (2006). Cluster Computing: High-Performance, High-Availability, and High-Throughput Processing on a Network of Computers. In Handbook of Nature-Inspired and Innovative Computing (pp. 521–551). Kluwer Academic Publishers. https://doi.org/10.1007/0-387-27705-6_16
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