Tomorrow's Computing Today, Volume 1 (original) (raw)



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ACM Queue, Volume 1

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Volume 1, Number 1, March 2003
Building Web Services

Stephen R. Bourne:
Finding the Right Questions. 4

Avi Freedman:
Securing The Edge. 5

Christopher Vincent:
Scripting Web Service Prototypes. 22-27

Mike Burner:
The Deliberate Revolution: Transforming Integration With XML Web Services. 28-37

Stans Kleijnen, Srikanth Raju:
An Open Web Services Architecture. 38-46

Ali Arsanjani, Brent Hailpern, Joanne Martin, Peri L. Tarr:
Web Services: Promises and Compromises. 48-58
Volume 1, Number 2, April 2003
Embedded Systems

George V. Neville-Neil:
The Truth About Embedded Systems. 4

George V. Neville-Neil
:
Programming Without a Net. 16-19

Telle Whitney, George V. Neville-Neil
:
SoC: Software, Hardware, Nightmare, Bliss. 24-28

Ivan Godard:
Division of Labor In Embedded Systems. 32-36

Homayoun Shahri:
Blurring Lines Between Hardware and Software. 42-46

Rolf Ernst:
Putting It All Together. 50-54
Volume 1, Number 3, May 2003
The Wireless Revolution

Robert J. Berger:
Open Spectrum: A Path to Ubiquitous Connectivity. 60-68

Robert Poor, Cliff Bowman, Charlotte Burgess Auburn:
Self-Healing Networks. 52-59

Lyn Bartram
, Michael Blackstock:
Designing Portable Collaborative Networks. 40-49

Bill McFarland, Michael Wong:
The Family Dynamics of 802.11. 28-38

Michael W. Ritter:
The Future of WLAN. 18-27

Jef Raskin:
The Woes of IDEs. 8-11

Terry Coatta:
Would You Like Some Data With That? 4-6

Douglas B. Terry, Venugopalan Ramasubramanian:
Caching XML Web Services for Mobility. 70-78
Volume 1, Number 4, June 2003
Storage

Dave Anderson:
You Don't Know Jack about Disks. 20-30

Peter Lyman, Hal R. Varian:
How Much Storage is Enough? 28-29

Erik Riedel:
Storage Systems: Not Just a Bunch of Disks Anymore. 32-41

Steven Kleiman:
DAFS: A New High-Performance Networked File System. 70-79

Jeffrey S. Goldner:
The Emergence of iSCSI. 42-49

Randy Harr:
Storage-n Sides to Every Story. 4-7

Josh Coates:
Big Storage: Make or Buy? 6-7
Volume 1, Number 5, July/August 2003
Open Source

Eric Allman, Marshall K. McKusick:
Viewing Open Source with an Open Mind. 6-7

Greg Lehey:
Closed Source Fights Back. 50

John M. Weathersby Jr.:
A Foot in the Door: Can Open Source Find Traction in Government? 52-53

Michael J. Karels:
Commercializing Open Source Software. 40

Hal R. Varian, Christopher M. Varian:
MOXIE: Microsoft Office-Linux Interoperability Experiment. 40-41

Paul Ferris:
The Age of Corporate Open Source Enlightenment. 34

Jim Barton:
From Server Room to Living Room. 20

Eric Allman:
A Conversation with Chris DiBona: An open source advocate reflects on the evolution of the movement.
Volume 1, Number 6, September 2003
Developer Tools: Proceed with Caution - Departments

David J. Brown:
From the Editors: The Developer's Art Today: Aikido or Sumo? 6-7

Jef Raskin:
Opinion: User Interface Designers, Slaves of Fashion. 10-11

David J. Brown:
Interview: A Conversation with Wayne Rosing. 12-20

R. Ballance, D. Chesley:
Book Reviews. 70
Features

Michael R. Donat:
Debugging in an Asynchronous World. 22-30

Donn Seeley:
Coding Smart: People vs. Tools. 33-40

George V. Neville-Neil
:
Code Spelunking: Exploring Cavernous Code Bases. 42-48

Peter Phillips, George Phillips:
No Source Code? No Problem! 50-57

Eric Allman:
Spam, Spam, Spam, Spam, Spam, the FTC, and Spam. 62-69
Volume 1, Number 7, October 2003
The Big Power Squeeze
Departments

Mike MacFaden:
From the Editors: CPUs with 2, 000 MIPS per Watt, Anyone? 4

Phillip A. Laplante:
Opinion: Stand and Deliver: Why I Hate Stand-Up Meetings. 7-9

Alexander Wolfe:
Toolkit: Microsoft's Compact Framework Targets Smart Devices. 10-12

David R. Ditzel:
Interview: A Conversation with Dan Dobberpuhl. 14-24

Fernando Berzal Galiano:
Book Reviews. 90-91

Eric Allman:
Curmudgeon: Wireless Networking Considered Flaky. 96-95
Features

Shekhar Borkar:
Getting Gigascale Chips: Challenges and Opportunities in Continuing Moore's Law. 26-33

Nick Tredennick, Brion Shimamoto:
The Inevitability of Reconfigurable Systems. 34-43

Marc A. Viredaz, Lawrence S. Brakmo, William R. Hamburgen:
Energy Management on Handheld Devices. 44-52

Wu-chun Feng:
Making a Case for Efficient Supercomputing. 54-64

Andrew Grover:
Modern System Power Management. 66-72

Caspar Boekhoudt:
The Big Bang Theory of IDEs. 74-82

Diomidis Spinellis:
Reading, Writing, and Code. 84-89
Volume 1, Number 8, November 2003
Instant Messaging: The Net's Real Killer App?
Departments

Wendy A. Kellogg:
From the Editors. 5

Marshall T. Rose:
Opinion: On Helicopters and Submarines. 10-13

Alexander Wolfe:
Toolkit: Eclipse: A Platform Becomes an Open-Source Woodstock. 14-16

Eric Allman:
Interview: A Conversation with Peter Ford. 18-27

Jakob Nielsen:
Curmudgeon: IM, Not IP (Information Pollution). 76-75
Special Section: Queue Focus

John C. Tang, James Begole:
Beyond Instant Messaging. 28-37

Frank Jania:
Broadcast Messaging: Messaging to the Masses. 38-43

Joe Hildebrand:
Nine IM Accounts and Counting. 44-50
Features

George W. Fitzmaurice, Azam Khan
, William Buxton, Gordon Kurtenbach, Ravin Balakrishnan:
Sentient Data. 52-62

Seth Hallem, David Y. W. Park, Dawson R. Engler:
Uprooting Software Defects at the Source. 64-71
Volume 1, Number 9, December/January 2003-2004
Distributed Development: The new world order for programmers
Departments

Edward Grossman:
From the Editors: New World Order. 5

Jef Raskin:
Opinion: Silicon Superstitions. 10-12

Alexander Wolfe:
Toolkit: GNU Tools: Relevant? 14-17

Tony Wasserman:
Interview: A Conversation with Steve Hagan. 18-25

Eric Allman:
Curmudgeon. 80-79
Special Section: Queue Focus: Distributed Development

Michael Turnlund:
Distributed Development: Lessons Learned. 26-31

Ken Coar:
The Sun Never Sits on Distributed Development. 32-39

Li-Te Cheng, Cleidson R. B. de Souza, Susanne Hupfer, John F. Patterson, Steven I. Ross:
Building Collaboration into IDEs. 40-50

Judith S. Olson, Gary M. Olson:
Culture Surprises in Remote Software Development Teams. 52-59
Features

Gordon Bell:
Sink or Swim: Know When It's Time to Bail. 60-67

James A. Whittaker, Herbert H. Thompson:
Black Box Debugging. 68-74
Volume 1, Number 10, February 2004
Game Development: Serious Business, Serious Coding
Departments

Edward Grossman:
From the Editors. 5

Phillip A. Laplante, Colin J. Neill:
Opinion: The Demise of the Waterfall Model Is Imminent. 10-15

Alexander Wolfe:
Toolkit: Java is Jumpin'. 16-19

Chris DiBona:
Interview: A Conversation with Will Harvey. 20-27

Josh Coates:
Curmudgeon: When Bad People Happen to Good Games. 92-91
Special Section: Queue Focus: Game Development

Jonathan Blow:
Game Development: Harder Than You Think. 28-37

Michi Henning:
Massively Multiplayer Middleware. 38-45

Andrew M. Phelps, David M. Parks:
Fun and Games: Multi-Language Development. 46-56

Alexander Nareyek:
AI in Computer Games. 58-65

Dean Macri:
The Scalability Problem. 66-73
Features

Bruce Schneier:
Sensible Authentication. 74-78

John T. Richards, Jim Christensen:
People in Our Software. 80-86

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