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XRDS, Volume 17
Volume 17, Number 1, Fall 2010
Letter from the editor
- Chris Harrison:
Next steps for XRDS: organic growth. 4
- Inbox. 5
- James Stanier:
Programming the future. 6
- Daniel Gooch:
MentorNet. 7
- Jason Thibodeau:
Five programming tips: start your coding career. 7
- Vaggelis Giannikas:
ACM chapter news: from Ontario to Hyderabad. 8-9
- Jeffrey L. Poet, A. Malcolm Campbell, Todd T. Eckdahl, Laurie J. Heyer:
Bacterial computing. 10-15 - Masami Hagiya, Fumiaki Tanaka, Ibuki Kawamata:
IT for synthetic biology and DNA nanotechnology. 16-21 - Bryan Catanzaro, Kurt Keutzer:
Parallel computing with patterns and frameworks. 22-27 - John M. Mellor-Crummey, William Gropp, Maurice Herlihy:
Teaching parallel programming: a roundtable discussion. 28-30 - Jason Ansel, Cy P. Chan:
PetaBricks. 32-37 - David L. Largent:
Getting and staying agile. 38-41 - Michael S. Bernstein:
Profile Armando Solar-Lezama: programming machines to program bits. 42 - Michael S. Bernstein:
Profile John Resig: origins of the JavaScript ninja. 44-45
- Dmitry Batenkov:
Hands-on introduction to genetic programming. 46-47
- Gideon Juve:
Information Sciences Institute: Marina del Rey, California. 48-50
- James Stanier:
Punch cards vs Java. 49
Volume 17, Number 2, Winter 2010
- Chris Harrison:
Names on the page: XRDS, networking and you. 4
- Inbox. 5
- Michael S. Bernstein, Inbal Talgam-Cohen:
Human computation and crowdsourcing. 6
- Daniel Gooch:
ACM career and job center. 7
- Matt Might:
The academic job search: How to prepare key documents. 7
- Vaggelis Giannikas:
Establishing an ACM student chapter: activity ideas for university groups. 8
- Lukas Biewald:
Massive multiplayer human computation for fun, money, and survival. 10-15 - Panagiotis G. Ipeirotis:
Analyzing the Amazon Mechanical Turk marketplace. 16-21 - Aniket Kittur:
Crowdsourcing, collaboration and creativity. 22-26 - Robert C. Miller, Greg Little, Michael S. Bernstein, Jeffrey P. Bigham, Lydia B. Chilton, Max Goldman, John Joseph Horton, Rajeev Nayak:
Heads in the cloud. 27-31 - Jason Dyer:
Mathematics for the masses. 32-33 - Michael Mitzenmacher:
An introduction to human-guided search. 34-35 - David A. Shamma:
Beyond freebird. 36-38 - M. Six Silberman, Lilly Irani, Joel Ross:
Ethics and tactics of professional crowdwork. 39-43 - Ran Halprin, Moni Naor:
Games for extracting randomness. 44-48 - Robert J. Simmons:
Profile Luis von Ahn: ReCaptcha, games with a purpose. 49 - Nelson Zhang:
Running the turk: interview with Amazon.com vice president Sharon Chiarella and PR manager Kay Kinton. 50-51
- Dmitry Batenkov:
Programmatic access to Wikipedia. 52-53
- Jason Wiese:
FXPAL---an interdisciplinary lab: Palo Alto, California. 54-55
- James Stanier:
The brain. 55
Volume 17, Number 3, Spring 2011
- Chris Harrison:
Four down. 3
- Inbox. 4
- Malay Bhattacharyya, Vaggelis Giannikas:
Behold a pail of milk: the future of banking, currency, and e-commerce. 5
- Daniel Gooch:
Special interest groups. 6
- David Richeson:
Letters of recommendation. 6
- Vaggelis Giannikas:
Competitions for chapters: the ACM student chapter excellence award. 7
- Nicole Immorlica:
Why I don't rob banks for a living. 8-10 - Brian Keegan, Muhammad Aurangzeb Ahmad, Dmitri Williams, Jaideep Srivastava, Noshir S. Contractor:
What can gold farmers teach us about criminal networks? 11-15 - Polo Chau:
Catching bad guys with graph mining. 16-18 - Mark Harrison:
The 'Internet of Things' and commerce. 19-22 - Nikolai V. Hovanov, James W. Kolari, Mikhail V. Sokolov:
The problem of money as a measuring stick. 23-27
- James Stanier:
An interview with Greg Schwartz. 28-30
- Dmitry Batenkov:
Boosting productivity with the Boost Graph Library. 31-32
- Svetlana Yarosh:
IBM Research-Almaden: San Jose, California. 33-34
- James Stanier:
E-Shopping. 34
Volume 17, Number 4, Summer 2011
- Chris Harrison:
Mixing things up. 3
- Inbox. 4
- Jon Froehlich:
Every bit has a cost. 5
- Daniel Gooch:
Email services at ACM. 6
- Ben Deverett:
Tips for going green. 6
- Vaggelis Giannikas:
What a wonderful world: ACM student chapters around the globe. 7
- Bill Weihl, Erik Teetzel, Jimmy Clidaras, Christopher Malone, Joe Kava, Michael Ryan:
Sustainable data centers. 8-12 - Prabal Dutta:
Sustainable sensing for a smarter planet. 14-20 - Leo Bonanni:
Sourcemap: eco-design, sustainable supply chains, and radical transparency. 22-26 - Ethan Schaffer:
GrowFood.org: sustainability, food, technology, and social networking. 27-28 - Dan Sturges:
Let's split! 30-34 - Steven Letendre, Willet Kempton, Jasna Tomic:
The networked vehicle 1.0: integrating electric cars with the nation's power grid. 35-38 - Tawanna Dillahunt, Jennifer Mankoff:
In the dark, out in the cold. 39-41 - Johnny Rodgers, Lyn Bartram, Rob Woodbury:
Challenges in sustainable human-home interaction. 42-46 - Alex Laskey, Ogi Kavazovic:
OPOWER. 47-51 - Tiffany Holmes:
Dialogical encounters: art and energy awareness via eco-visualization. 52-55
- Dmitry Batenkov:
Web maps of renewable energy. 56-57
- Gideon Juve:
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory: Berkeley, California. 58-59
- James Stanier:
Green technology. 59
- Robert J. Simmons:
Rob Bernard: Microsoft's green commitment. 65
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