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11th MSS 1991: Monterey, California, USA
- Proceedings of the Eleventh IEEE Symposium on Mass Storage Systems, Monterey, California, USA, October 7-10, 1991. IEEE Computer Society 1991, ISBN 0-8186-2155-9

- Antony Foster, David Habermehl:

Renaissance: managing the network computer and its storage requirements. 3-10 - Don E. Tolmie:

Local area gigabit networking. 11-16 - Ben Kobler, John Berbert:

NASA Earth Observing System Data Information System (EOSDIS). 18-19 - Andrew Hanushevsky:

National Supercomputing Center mass storage system requirements. 20-21 - Michael Nemanic:

Client requirements for a UNIX-based network file-transport utility. 22-24 - Bill Collins:

High-performance data systems. 25-26 - Tom Myers, Elizabeth Williams:

Mass storage requirements in the intelligence community. 27-28 - Stephen W. Miller:

MSS requirements for data acquisition systems. 29-30 - Susan E. Hauser, Christopher Rivera, George R. Thoma:

Factors affecting the performance of a DOS-based WORM file server. 33-37 - Suzanne M. Kelly, Rena A. Haynes, Martha J. Ernest:

Benchmarking a network storage service. 38-44 - Walter A. Burkhard, Kimberly C. Claffy, Thomas J. E. Schwarz:

Performance of balanced disk array schemes. 45-50 - Ethan L. Miller, Randy H. Katz:

Analyzing the I/O behavior of supercomputer applications. 51-55 - Elias Drakopoulos, Matt J. Merges:

Performance study of client-server storage systems. 67-72 - Anthony L. Peterson:

E-systems Modular Automated Storage System (EMASS) software functionality. 73-76 - Donna Mecozzi, James Minton:

Design for a transparent, distributed file system. 77-84 - A. Lester Buck, Robert A. Coyne:

Dynamic hierarchies and optimization in distributed storage systems. 85-91 - Bill Ross, Julian Richards:

Volume management by the book: the NAStore Volume Manager. 95-99 - Nathan Hillery, Peter Cassels, Richard Misenheimer, Rodney Shojinaga:

The NCSC mass storage project. 100-103 - Sanjay Ranade:

A high-performance UNIX network storage server. 104-108 - Jamie Shiers:

Distributed storage management in high energy physics. 109-112 - Hartmut Reuter:

The HADES file server. 113-116 - Daniel S. Nydick, Kathy Benninger, Brett Bosley, James Ellis, Jonathan S. Goldick, Christopher Kirby, Michael Levine, Christopher Maher, Matt Mathis:

An AFS-based mass storage system at the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center. 117-122 - Luis-Felipe Cabrera, Darrell D. E. Long:

Swift: a storage architecture for large objects. 123-128 - John Wilkes:

DataMesh-parallel storage systems for the 1990s. 131-136 - David Tweten, Alan Poston:

Distributed NAStore as the next step. 137-142 - Gustav S. Christensen, William R. Franta, W. A. Petersen:

Future directions of high-speed networks for distributed storage environments. 145-148 - Ichiro Yamada, Minoru Saito, Akinori Watanabe, Kiyoshi Itao:

Automated optical mass storage systems with 3-beam magneto-optical disk drives. 149-154 - Steve Redfield, Jerry Willenbring:

Holostore technology for higher levels of memory hierarchy. 155-159 - William M. Mularie:

National Media Laboratory. 160-161

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