Index: doc/theses/thierry_delisle_PhD/thesis/text/conclusion.tex
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--- doc/theses/thierry_delisle_PhD/thesis/text/conclusion.tex	(revision 836cf64750d8673d07ad0bf683e6720a85990abc)
+++ doc/theses/thierry_delisle_PhD/thesis/text/conclusion.tex	(revision e228f46559ffceeb1ba2edf67158058beed42eeb)
@@ -9,5 +9,5 @@
 However, in doing so I discovered two expected challenges.
 First, while modern symmetric multiprocessing CPU have significant performance penalties for communicating across cores.
-This makes implementing algorithm notably more difficult, since fairness generally requires \procs to be aware of each other's progress.
+This makes implementing fair schedulers notably more difficult, since fairness generally requires \procs to be aware of each other's progress.
 This challenge is made even harder when comparing against MQMS schedulers (see Section\ref{sched}) which have very little inter-\proc communication.
 This is particularly true of state-of-the-art work-stealing schedulers, which can have virtually no inter-\proc communication in some common workloads.
