Jean-Loup Baer is Professor Emeritus of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of Washington, where he has been since 1969. Professor Baer is the author of Computer Systems Architecture and more than 100 refereed papers. He is a Guggenheim Fellow, an ACM Fellow, and an IEEE Fellow. Baer has held several editorial positions, including editor-in-chief of the Journal of VLSI and Computer Systems and editor of the IEEE Transactions on Computers, the IEEE Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems, and the Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing. He has served as General Chair and Program Chair of several conferences, including ISCA and HPCA.
'The book gives a comprehensive and profound description of the architecture of microprocessors from simple in-order short pipeline designs to out-of-order superscalers ... The book is very well structured with good presentation of the material. Each chapter finishes with many exercises, examples and additional literature. All the references are very up-to-date. As a conclusion I warmly recommend this book as a textbook for a course or just as a reference book.' Zentralblatt MATH Professor Baer has developed an extremely appropriate and timely textbook for computer architecture, with a focus on how processors work, and how select micro-architectural features work. He is an excellent teacher, and has effectively presented and explained the concepts. The text covers all the major subjects necessary for a semester-long course in computer architecture. Patrick Crowley, Washington University in St. Louis Overall, I believe that the book will serve as a useful textbook for explaining concepts related to the architecture of microprocessors to undergraduate and graduate students. S. V. Nagaraj, Computing Reviews