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XRDS, Volume 23
Volume 23, Number 1, Fall 2016
- Jennifer Jacobs:
From prototype to product: deployment strategies in computer science research. 5-6
- Dawei Ding:
Quantum computation: double majoring in physics and computer science. 7-8
- Andrew J. Hunsucker:
Time management as a Ph.D. 9-10
- Geerten Peek, Ahmet Taspinar:
One thousand interviews. 11-12
- Nur Al-huda Hamdan:
CHI 2016: global, diverse, good. 13-14 - Gustavo Fortes Tondello:
An introduction to gamification in human-computer interaction. 15-17
- Daniel López Sánchez:
"ANN" helps Mario rescue Princess Toadstool. 18-19
- Jay Patel:
Quantum milestones. 19
- Bingjie Wang:
Quantum algorithms for machine learning. 20-24 - Michael L. Wall, Arghavan Safavi-Naini, Martin Gärttner:
Many-body quantum mechanics: too big to fail? 25-29 - Stephen P. Jordan:
Black holes, quantum mechanics, and the limits of polynomial-time computability. 30-33 - Alexandru Paler, Austin G. Fowler, Robert Wille:
Reliable quantum circuits have defects. 34-38 - Adam Bouland:
Establishing quantum advantage. 40-44 - Simon J. Devitt:
Programming quantum computers using 3-D puzzles, coffee cups, and doughnuts. 45-50 - Brian Swingle:
Black holes and the limits of quantum information processing. 52-56 - Johannes Bausch:
Undecidability of the spectral gap. 57-61
- Adrian Scoica:
David Deutsch: understanding computation as a consequence of physics. 62-63
- Seung Woo Shin:
UC Berkeley's quantum computing group: Berkeley, CA. 64-65
- Asmaa Rabie:
The RSA trap. 65
- Marinka Zitnik:
The infinite mixtures of food products. 66-67
Volume 23, Number 2, Winter 2016
Letter from the editors
- Okke Schrijvers:
The forgotten promise of technology. 5-7
- Niloufar Salehi:
The future of work. 9-11
- Andy J. Hunsucker:
When should you quit your Ph.D.?: I cannot do this for the rest of my life. 12-13
- David Byrd:
UC Irvine WICS blazing trails for women in CS. 14-15
- Tony Blankemeyer:
Finding your MAP for career choices: what makes a great "intrapreneur"? 16-17
- Jay Patel:
Milestones in labor automation. 17
- Tim O'Reilly:
Don't replace people. Augment them. 18-21 - Ece Kamar:
Hybrid workplaces of the future. 22-25 - Jaime Teevan:
The future of microwork. 26-29
- Niloufar Salehi:
The context of on-demand work. 30-33 - Lilly Irani:
The hidden faces of automation. 34-37 - Paolo Parigi, Xiao Ma:
The gig economy. 42-47 - Nidhi Rastogi, Adrian Scoica:
The art and design of autonomous machines. 48-51 - Jeffrey P. Bigham, Kristin Williams:
Building a brighter future for crowd work. 52-55 - Hila Lifshitz-Assaf:
Where are the flying cars? 56-61
- Adrian Scoica:
Manuel Grenacher: cautiously tapping into collaborative economics. 62-63
- Christoph Gebhardt:
Advanced Interactive Technologies Lab: Zürich, Switzerland. 64-65
- Asmaa Rabie:
Limber employment. 65
- Tejas Khot:
Visualizing high-dimensional data. 66-67
Volume 23, Number 3, Spring 2017
- Jennifer Jacobs:
Technology in defense of democracy. 5-7
- Rahul R. Divekar, Nidhi Rastogi:
Tech for crises. 8-9
- Andrew J. Hunsucker:
How to manage your advisor. 10-11
- Anshuman Majumdar:
Uppsala University ACM-W. 12-13
- Alok Pandey:
Crisis management. 13
- Christopher Hazlett:
In praise of soft skills. 14-15
- Laura Rabinow, Lindsay Poirier:
Mapping organized ignorance in environmental health. 16-19 - Hui Su:
The cognitive and immersive situations room. 20-23 - Joan M. Donovan:
From social movements to social surveillance. 24-27 - Ketaki Katdare:
Biological obstacles and technological leaps. 28-31 - Dominic DiFranzo, Marie Joan Kristine Gloria:
Filter bubbles and fake news. 32-35 - Rahul R. Divekar, Nidhi Rastogi:
Managing crises, one text at a time. 36-37 - Nidhi Rastogi, Rahul R. Divekar:
Serving people in crisis to make the world a better place. 38-39
- Adrian Scoica:
Mikel Maron: a life spent digitizing the sense of direction. 40-41
- Nidhi Rastogi:
Online censorship, cyberattacks, and access to information. 42-44 - Edmon Begoli, Vincent Schlegel, Michael Francis Atiyah, Praise Adeyemo, Tim Baarslag:
The Heidelberg Laureate Forum on the moving frontier between mathematics and computer science. 46-49 - Vasileios Kalantzis:
Data analytics, accelerators, and supercomputing: the challenges and future of MPI. 50-52
- Trevor Witt:
Applied Aviation Research Center: Kansas State University Polytechnic Campus. 54-55
- Asmaa Rabie:
Blooming in adversity. 55
- Tejas Khot:
Parallelization in Python. 56-58
Volume 23, Number 4, Summer 2017
- Okke Schrijvers:
Knowledge valorization. 5
- Jie Qi:
Startups and entrepreneurship. 8-10
- Federico Fregosi:
Flexing DevOps talent in a startup. 11
- Andrew J. Hunsucker:
How to choose a conference. 12-13
- Anshuman Majumdar:
Kean ACM-W: promoting women's participation in CS. 14-15
- Alok Pandey:
Startups: then and now. 15
- Dipika Rajesh:
Asclepius will see you now. 16-17
- Abdelrahman Hosny:
Cancer: from biology to computer science. 18-19 - Gustavo Fortes Tondello:
Positive computing: a novel research field to promote human well-being. 20
- Stephen Miller:
Forests, trees, and false dichotomies. 22-25 - Jie Qi:
On entrepreneurship. 26-31 - Limor Fried:
Running an alt.business: being a good cause and doing good business. 32-35 - Joshua Lifton:
Identity: the killer app of crowdfunded open hardware. 36-41 - Alicia Gibb, Nathan Seidle:
Being an open entrepreneur. 42-45 - Chris Wang, Jacinta Plucinski:
Building a business based on the life you want to lead. 46-49 - Numair Khan:
I, entrepreneur. 50-53
- Adrian Scoica:
Jon Van Caneghem: designing games for a generation. 54-55
- Razvan Rughinis:
Innovation labs: University Politehnica of Bucharest. 56-57
- Vasileios Kalantzis:
How startups changed the way we do science. 57
- Teodor Szente:
Predictable state containers. 58-59
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