In his blog , Eric Eilebrecht explains why when writing multithreaded applications today we should stick to the weak ECMA memory model instead of CLR’s much stronger memory model. In principal, I have no issue with using a weaker model than the CLR memory
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Memory is usually a shared resource on multithreaded systems therefore access to it must be regulated and fully specified. This specification is often called a “Memory Model”. Optimisations performed by compilers and the emergence of multi-core processors
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