Journal: Communications of the ACM

Volume 55, Issue 10

5 -- 0Vinton G. Cerf. Where is the science in computer science?
6 -- 7. When harm to conference reputation is self-inflicted
8 -- 9Daniel Reed, Ed H. Chi. Online privacy; replicating research results
11 -- 13Neil Savage. Digging for drug facts
14 -- 16Gregory Mone. Redesigning the data center
17 -- 19Leah Hoffmann. Computer science and the three Rs
20 -- 23Michael A. Cusumano. Reflecting on the Facebook IPO
24 -- 25Phillip G. Armour. The Goldilocks estimate
26 -- 29Peter G. Neumann. The foresight saga, redux
30 -- 31George V. Neville-Neil. A nice piece of code
32 -- 34Jean-François Blanchette. Computing as if infrastructure mattered
35 -- 36Ivan Sutherland. The tyranny of the clock
38 -- 47Rick Ratzel, Rodney Greenstreet. Toward higher precision
48 -- 52John Allspaw. Fault injection in production
53 -- 55Poul-Henning Kamp. A generation lost in the bazaar
56 -- 67Michael Kearns. Experiments in social computation
68 -- 77Barbara Simons, Douglas W. Jones. Internet voting in the U.S
78 -- 87Pedro Domingos. A few useful things to know about machine learning
89 -- 0Rocco A. Servedio. A high-dimensional surprise: technical perspective
90 -- 97Guy Kindler, Anup Rao, Ryan O'Donnell, Avi Wigderson. Spherical cubes: optimal foams from computational hardness amplification
98 -- 0Bruce Hendrickson. Graph embeddings and linear equations: technical perspective
99 -- 107Ioannis Koutis, Gary L. Miller, Richard Peng. A fast solver for a class of linear systems
112 -- 0Geoffrey A. Landis. Future tense