Schedule for paper presentation
18:00 - 18:10  Somboon Panyapolsakul, Trends in semiconductor memories
18:10 - 18:20  Arch Channansil, MMX technology
18:20 - 18:30  Thitipong Limudomsuk, Exploiting instruction and
data level parallelism
18:30 - 18:40  Suratose Tritilanunt Virtual address caches
18:40 - 18:50  Nawapunt Manusitthipol, PicoJava-1
10 minutes break
19:00 - 19:10  Prapong Prechaprapranwong,  Challenges to
combining general purpose and multimedia processors
19:10 - 19:20  Pornchai Taechatanasat, The HP PA-8000 RISC CPU
19:20 - 19:30  Kittiwan Nimkerdphol, A new direction for computer
architecture research
Tips how to give a good talk
- 
Presenting what you understand.  Your friends will be more
likely to appreciate a talk that they understand which mean the presenter
must understand the subject first.
 
- 
Don't just summarize the paper.  It will not be convincing. 
You need to present some evidence for what you are claiming, such as, the
processor X is very good becuase it is very fast, now, show me the benchmark
result for this processor.  Therefore, present some hard fact that
included in the full paper.
 
- 
Talk about what you think about that paper.  This is your opinion. 
The audience like to hear opinion and give them something to discuss.
 
- 
Prepare your slide.  A big, easy to see, clear layout, slide
will relieve the eyes strain of your friends.  Remember they all have
to sit through 8 papers!