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Communications of the ACM, Volume 58
Volume 58, Number 1, January 2015
- Moshe Y. Vardi:
The rise and fall of industrial research labs. 5 - Vinton G. Cerf:
A long way to have come and still to go. 7
- Toward a map interface not inherently related to geography. 8-9
- ACM's FY14 annual report. 11-15
- Valerie Barr, Michael Stonebraker:
A valuable lesson, and whither Hadoop? 18-19
- Erica Klarreich:
In search of Bayesian inference. 21-24 - Samuel Greengard:
Smart transportation networks drive gains. 25-27 - Gary Anthes:
Data brokers are watching you. 28-30 - Lawrence M. Fisher:
Google Boosts ACM's Turing award prize to $1 million. 31
- Michael A. Cusumano:
How traditional firms must compete in the sharing economy. 32-34
- Lee A. Bygrave:
A right to be forgotten? 35-37
- Phillip G. Armour:
A little queue theory. 38-39
- Thomas Haigh:
The tears of Donald Knuth. 40-44
- Reza Rawassizadeh, Blaine A. Price, Marian Petre:
Wearables: has the age of smartwatches finally arrived? 45-47 - Hermann Maurer:
Does the internet make us stupid? 48-51 - Silvio Micali:
What it means to receive the Turing award. 52-53
- Rick Richardson:
Disambiguating databases. 54-61 - Geetanjali Sampemane:
Internal access controls. 62-65 - Davidlohr Bueso:
Scalability techniques for practical synchronization primitives. 66-74
- Virender Singh, Alicia Perdigones, José Luis García, Ignacio Cañas-Guerrero, Fernando R. Mazarrón:
Analyzing worldwide research in hardware architecture, 1997-2011. 76-85 - Tuukka Ruotsalo, Giulio Jacucci, Petri Myllymäki, Samuel Kaski:
Interactive intent modeling: information discovery beyond search. 86-92
- Ravi Nair:
Big data needs approximate computing: technical perspective. 104 - Hadi Esmaeilzadeh, Adrian Sampson, Luis Ceze, Doug Burger:
Neural acceleration for general-purpose approximate programs. 105-115
- William Sims Bainbridge:
Future tense. 128-
Volume 58, Number 2, February 2015
- Moshe Y. Vardi:
Is information technology destroying the middle class? 5 - Vinton G. Cerf:
There is nothing new under the sun. 7
- Software engineering, like electrical engineering. 8-9
- Mark Guzdial:
What's the best way to teach computer science to beginners? 12-13
- Neil Savage:
Visualizing sound. 15-17 - Logan Kugler:
Online privacy: regional differences. 18-20 - Keith Kirkpatrick:
Using technology to help people. 21-23
- Carl E. Landwehr:
We need a building code for building code. 24-26
- Ming Zeng:
Three paradoxes of building platforms. 27-29
- Peter G. Neumann:
Far-sighted thinking about deleterious computer-related events. 30-33
- Diana Franklin:
Putting the computer science in computing education research. 34-36
- George V. Neville-Neil:
Too big to fail. 37-39
- Armando Fox, David A. Patterson:
Do-it-yourself textbook publishing. 40-43 - Benjamin Livshits, Manu Sridharan, Yannis Smaragdakis, Ondrej Lhoták, José Nelson Amaral, Bor-Yuh Evan Chang, Samuel Z. Guyer, Uday P. Khedker, Anders Møller, Dimitrios Vardoulakis:
In defense of soundiness: a manifesto. 44-46
- Harlan Stenn:
Securing network time protocol. 48-51 - Robert V. Binder, Bruno Legeard, Anne Kramer:
Model-based testing: where does it stand? 52-56
- Carlos Juiz, Mark Toomey:
To govern IT, or not to govern IT? 58-64 - Dalal Alrajeh, Jeff Kramer, Alessandra Russo, Sebastián Uchitel:
Automated support for diagnosis and repair. 65-72
- Michael Walfish, Andrew J. Blumberg:
Verifying computations without reexecuting them. 74-84
- Thomas A. Henzinger, Jean-François Raskin:
The equivalence problem for finite automata: technical perspective. 86 - Filippo Bonchi, Damien Pous:
Hacking nondeterminism with induction and coinduction. 87-95
- Dennis E. Shasha:
Upstart Puzzles: Take Your Seats. 104
Volume 58, Number 3, March 2015
- Wayne Graves:
Raising ACM's Digital Library. 5
- Make abstracts communicate results. 6
- Vinton G. Cerf:
'As we may think'. 7
- Valerie Barr, Mark Guzdial:
Advice on teaching CS, and the learnability of programming languages. 8-9
- Keith Kirkpatrick:
Automating organic synthesis. 13-15 - Tom Geller:
Car talk. 16-18 - Esther Shein:
Python for beginners. 19-21
- Pamela Samuelson:
Copyrightability of Java APIs revisited. 22-24
- Thomas J. Cortina:
Reaching a broader population of students through "unplugged" activities. 25-27
- Peter J. Denning, Edward E. Gordon:
A technician shortage. 28-30
- John Leslie King:
Humans in computing: growing responsibilities for researchers. 31-33
- Shriram Krishnamurthi, Jan Vitek:
The real software crisis: repeatability as a core value. 34-36 - Maarten Bullynck, Edgar G. Daylight, Liesbeth De Mol:
Why did computer science make a hero out of Turing? 37-39
- Poul-Henning Kamp:
HTTP/2.0: the IETF is phoning it in. 40-42 - Dave Long:
META II: digital vellum in the digital scriptorium. 43-48
- Stephen J. Andriole:
Who owns IT? 50-57
- Timothy Libert:
Privacy implications of health information seeking on the web. 68-77
- Edward H. Adelson:
Image processing goes back to basics: technical perspective. 80 - Sylvain Paris, Samuel W. Hasinoff, Jan Kautz:
Local Laplacian filters: edge-aware image processing with a Laplacian pyramid. 81-91
- Leah Hoffmann:
Q&A. 96-
Volume 58, Number 4, April 2015
- Joseph A. Konstan, Jack W. Davidson:
Charting the future: scholarly publishing in CS. 5 - Vinton G. Cerf:
The human touch. 7
- Human or machine? 8-9
- John Langford, Mark Guzdial:
The arbitrariness of reviews, and advice for school administrators. 12-13
- Alex Wright:
Molecular moonshots. 15-17 - Chris Edwards:
Secure-system designers strive to stem data leaks. 18-20 - Mark Broderick:
What's the price now? 21-23
- Dorothy E. Denning:
Toward more secure software. 24-26
- Mari Sako:
Competing in emerging markets. 27-29
- George V. Neville-Neil:
Raw networking. 30-32
- Len Shustek:
An interview with Juris Hartmanis. 33-37
- Leslie Lamport:
Who builds a house without drawing blueprints? 38-41
- Paul Vixie:
Go static or go home. 42-45 - Neil J. Gunther, Paul Puglia, Kristofer Tomasette:
Hadoop superlinear scalability. 46-55
- Philip R. Cohen, Edward C. Kaiser, M. Cecelia Buchanan, Scott Lind, Michael J. Corrigan, R. Matthews Wesson:
Sketch-Thru-Plan: a multimodal interface for command and control. 56-65 - Chris Newcombe, Tim Rath, Fan Zhang, Bogdan Munteanu, Marc Brooker, Michael Deardeuff:
How Amazon web services uses formal methods. 66-73
- Johannes Sametinger, Jerzy W. Rozenblit, Roman L. Lysecky, Peter Ott:
Security challenges for medical devices. 74-82
- Trevor N. Mudge:
The specialization trend in computer hardware: techincal perspective. 84 - Wajahat Qadeer, Rehan Hameed, Ofer Shacham, Preethi Venkatesan, Christos Kozyrakis, Mark Horowitz:
Convolution engine: balancing efficiency and flexibility in specialized computing. 85-93
- David Allen Batchelor:
Future Tense: The Wealth of Planets. 96-
Volume 58, Number 5, May 2015
- Moshe Y. Vardi:
Incentivizing quality and impact in computing research. 5 - Vinton G. Cerf:
Cascade failure. 7
- Abolish software warranty disclaimers. 8-9
- Joel Adams, Daniel A. Reed:
Introducing young women to CS, and supporting advanced research environments. 10-11
- Logan Kugler:
Is "good enough" computing good enough? 12-14 - Keith Kirkpatrick:
Putting the data science into journalism. 15-17 - Gregory Mone:
Robots with a human touch. 18-19
- Michael Schrage, Marshall W. Van Alstyne:
Life of IP. 20-23
- Sally Fincher:
What are we doing when we teach computing in schools? 24-26
- Christopher Jon Sprigman:
Oracle v. Google: a high-stakes legal fight for the software industry. 27-29
- Thomas Ball, Benjamin G. Zorn:
Teach foundational language principles. 30-31 - Serge Abiteboul, Benjamin André, Daniel Kaplan:
Managing your digital life. 32-35
- Justin Sheehy:
There is no now. 36-41 - Spencer Rathbun:
Parallel processing with <code>promises</code>. 42-47
- Sören Preibusch:
Privacy behaviors after Snowden. 48-55 - Roli Varma, Deepak Kapur:
Decoding femininity in computer science in India. 56-62
- Jean-Paul Laumond, Nicolas Mansard, Jean-Bernard Lasserre:
Optimization as motion selection principle in robot action. 64-74
- James R. Larus:
Programming multicore computers: technical perspective. 76 - Nadathur Satish, Changkyu Kim, Jatin Chhugani, Hideki Saito, Rakesh Krishnaiyer, Mikhail Smelyanskiy, Milind Girkar, Pradeep Dubey:
Can traditional programming bridge the ninja performance gap for parallel computing applications? 77-86
- Dennis E. Shasha:
Upstart Puzzles: Strategic Friendship. 88
Volume 58, Number 6, June 2015
- John White:
Thank you... 5 - Vinton G. Cerf:
A celebration of accomplishments. 7
- To learn CS principles, start in the cafeteria line. 8-9
- Mark Guzdial:
Bringing evidence-based education to CS. 10-11
- Neil Savage:
Plenty of proteins. 12-14 - Samuel Greengard:
Between the lines. 15-17 - Gary Anthes:
Estonia: a model for e-government. 18-20 - Andreas Reuter:
Klaus Tschira: 1940-2015. 21 - Neil Savage:
Forging relationships. 22-23
- Vishal Misra:
Routing money, not packets. 24-27
- Peter J. Denning:
Emergent innovation. 28-31
- George V. Neville-Neil:
Lazarus code. 32-33
- Meg Leta Jones:
Forgetting made (too) easy. 34-35 - Yannis Papakonstantinou:
Created computed universe. 36-38
- Vinton G. Cerf:
An interview with U.S. chief technology officer Megan Smith. 39-43
- Kate Matsudaira:
The science of managing data science. 44-47 - Stepán Davidovic, Kavita Guliani:
Reliable Cron across the planet. 48-53
- Reza Zafarani, Huan Liu:
Evaluation without ground truth in social media research. 54-60 - Kurt Jensen, Lars Michael Kristensen:
Colored Petri nets: a graphical language for formal modeling and validation of concurrent systems. 61-70 - Leslie Lamport:
Turing lecture: The computer science of concurrency: the early years. 71-76
- Mark Berman, Piet Demeester, Jae Woo Lee, Kiran Nagaraja, Michael Zink, Didier Colle, Dilip Kumar Krishnappa, Dipankar Raychaudhuri, Henning Schulzrinne, Ivan Seskar, Sachin Sharma:
Future internets escape the simulator. 78-89
- Patrick Baudisch:
Virtual reality in your living room: technical perspective. 92 - Brett R. Jones, Hrvoje Benko, Eyal Ofek, Andrew D. Wilson:
IllumiRoom: immersive experiences beyond the TV screen. 93-100
- Leah Hoffmann:
Q&A: The Path to Clean Data. 104-
Volume 58, Number 7, July 2015
- Alexander L. Wolf:
A new chief executive officer and executive director of ACM. 4-5 - Vinton G. Cerf:
Milestones. 7
- Quality vs. quantity in faculty publications. 8-9
- John Arquilla, Duncan A. Buell:
The dangers of military robots, the risks of online voting. 12-13
- Chris Edwards:
Growing pains for deep learning. 14-16 - Gregory Goth:
Bringing big data to the big tent. 17-19 - Gregory Mone:
The new smart cities. 20-21