In "Regulating the Information Gatekeepers" (Nov. 2010),                           Patrick Vogl and Michael Barrett said a  counterargument against                           the regulation of search-engine bias is that  "Search results are                           free speech and therefore cannot be  regulated." I'm  astounded that                           anyone could seriously make such a  counterargument.					
								
			CACM Staff
Shine the Light of Computational Complexity
						Regarding Moshe Y. Vardi's view of computational complexity in "On P, NP, and  Computational                           Complexity" (Nov. 2010), I'd like to add that  the goal of                           computational complexity is to explore the  potential and                           limitation of efficient computation.					
								
			
						To ensure the timely publication of articles, Communications created the Virtual Extension (VE) to expand the page limitations of the print edition by bringing readers the same high-quality articles in an online-only format. VE articles undergo the same rigorous review process as those in the print edition and are accepted for publication on merit. The following synopses are from articles now available in their entirety to ACM members via the Digital Library.					
								
			To Change the World, Take a Chance
						Some of what Constantine Dovrolis said in the                           Point/Counterpoint "Future Internet  Architecture: Clean-Slate                           Versus Evolutionary Research" (Sept. 2010)  made                           sense. But I found                           his "pragmatic vision" argument neither  pragmatic nor visionary.					
								
			A Conversation with Ed Catmull
						Pixar's president Ed Catmull sits down with Stanford professor (and former Pixar-ian) Pat Hanrahan to reflect on the blending of art and technology.					
								
			
						As an editor of The Fourth Paradigm and someone who subscribes to Jim Gray's vision that there are now four fundamental scientific methodologies, I feel I must respond to Moshe Y. Vardi's Editor's Letter "Science Has Only Two Legs" (Sept. 2010).
					
								
			
						The following synopses are from Virtual Extension articles that are now available in their entirety to ACM members via the Digital Library.					
								
			
						Though I agree with Mordechai Ben-Ari's Viewpoint "Objects                           Never? Well, Hardly Ever!" (Sept. 2010) saying  that students                           should be introduced to procedural programming  before                           object-oriented programming, dismissing OOP  could mean throwing                           out the baby with the bathwater.					
								
			
						Communications' Virtual Extension expands the page limitations of the print edition by bringing readers high-quality articles in an online-only format.					
								
			Shape the Future of Computing
ACM encourages its members to take a direct hand in shaping the future of the association. There are more ways than ever to get involved.
Get Involved

