Journal: Communications of the ACM

Volume 44, Issue 3

5 -- 0Diane Crawford. Editorial Pointers
9 -- 10Robert Fox. News track
13 -- 14Phillip G. Armour. Software as Currency
17 -- 20Hal Berghel. A cyberpublishing manifesto
28 -- 31Gordon Bell, Jim Gray. Digital immortality
31 -- 32Rita R. Colwell. Closing the circle of information technology
33 -- 35Norman I. Badler. Virtual beings
36 -- 37Donald A. Norman. Cyborgs
38 -- 40Ramesh Jain. Digital experience
41 -- 43Joseph Jacobson. The desktop fab
44 -- 0Dan Bricklin. Look to the past to envision the future
45 -- 0Ted Selker. Affecting humanity
46 -- 47Leon A. Kappelman. The future is ours
48 -- 49V. Michael Bove Jr.. Astronauts and mosquitoes
50 -- 52Andries van Dam. User interfaces: disappearing, dissolving, and evolving
53 -- 55Eric A. Brewer. When everything is searchable
55 -- 57Martin Cooper. Bandwidth and the creation of awareness
58 -- 59Thomas A. Horan. The paradox of place
60 -- 61Ronald J. Vetter. The wireless web
62 -- 65Usama M. Fayyad. The digital physics of data mining
66 -- 67Jennifer C. Lai. When computers speak, hear, and understand
68 -- 69Jim Waldo. When the network is everything
70 -- 71Steven J. Schwartz. Wearables in 2048
72 -- 73Cameron Miner. Pushing functionality into even smaller devices
74 -- 76Christopher R. Johnson. Computational bioimaging for medical diagnosis and treatment
76 -- 77Jacques Cohen. Computers and biology
78 -- 80Thomas L. Sterling. Continuum computer architecture for exaflops computation
81 -- 0Jon Crowcroft. Never lost, never forgotten
82 -- 83Michael J. Muller, Ellen Christiansen, Bonnie A. Nardi, Susan M. Dray. Spiritual life and information technology
84 -- 86Whitfield Diffie. Ultimate cryptography
88 -- 91Raymond Kurzweil. Promise and peril-the deeply intertwined poles of 21st century technology
92 -- 0Edsger W. Dijkstra. The end of computing science?
93 -- 0Hal R. Varian. The computer-mediated economy
96 -- 97Brock N. Meeks. Accountability through transparency;: life in 2050
98 -- 99Pamela Samuelson. Toward a new politics of intellectual property
100 -- 101Dennis Tsichritzis. Forget the past to win the future
102 -- 103Andrew Grosso. The demise of sovereignty
104 -- 106Anthony M. Townsend, James T. Bennett. Electronic empire
106 -- 107Ari Schwartz. A larger role in the public policy process for user control
108 -- 110Karen Holtzblatt. Inventing the future
111 -- 0Richard M. Stallman. Can freedom withstand e-books?
112 -- 113Peter J. Denning. Many zeros ahead
114 -- 115Bruce Schneier. Insurance and the computer industry
116 -- 117Kilnam Chon. The future of the internet digital divide
118 -- 121Grady Booch. Developing the future
122 -- 124Henry Lieberman, Christopher Fry. Will software ever work?
125 -- 0Ann Winblad, Mark Gorenberg. A just-in-time software-based world
126 -- 129Larry L. Constantine. Back to the future
130 -- 0Cherri M. Pancake. The ubiquitous beauty of user-aware software
131 -- 132Steven M. Bellovin. Computer security - an end state?
132 -- 133Doug Riecken. A commonsense opportunity for computing
134 -- 135Ravi Ganesan. Keep (over)reaching for the stars
139 -- 141Anita Borg. Universal literacy - a challenge for computing in the 21st Century
142 -- 143Roger C. Schank. The computer isn t the medium, it s the message
144 -- 145Mitchel Resnick. Closing the fluency gap
168 -- 0Peter G. Neumann, David Lorge Parnas. Computers: boon or bane?