To move forward with programming languages we must first break free from the tyranny of ASCII.
Poul-Henning Kamp From Communications of the ACM | November 2010
As storage systems grow larger and larger, protecting their data for long-term storage is becoming ever more challenging.David S. H. Rosenthal From Communications of the ACM | November 2010
Component models can help diagnose architectural problems in both new and existing systems.Kevin Montagne From Communications of the ACM | October 2010
Information technology has the potential to radically transform health care. Why has progress been so slow?Stephen V. Cantrill From Communications of the ACM | September 2010
Everything you always wanted to know but were afraid to ask about the decision-making process.Jan Damsgaard, Jan Karlsbjerg From Communications of the ACM | August 2010
Could ubiquitous hand-drawn code map diagrams become a thing of the past?Robert DeLine, Gina Venolia, Kael Rowan From Communications of the ACM | August 2010
Heat maps are a unique and powerful way to visualize latency data. Explaining the results, however, is an ongoing challenge.Brendan Gregg From Communications of the ACM | July 2010
A survey of powerful visualization techniques, from the obvious to the obscure.Jeffrey Heer, Michael Bostock, Vadim Ogievetsky From Communications of the ACM | June 2010
As hard-drive capacities continue to outpace their throughput, the time has come for a new level of RAID.
Adam Leventhal From Communications of the ACM | January 2010
Companies have access to more types of external data than ever before. How can they integrate it most effectively?Stephen Petschulat From Communications of the ACM | January 2010
Participatory sensing technologies could improve our lives and our communities, but at what cost to our privacy?Katie Shilton From Communications of the ACM | November 2009
Stanford professor Pat Hanrahan sits down with the noted hedge fund founder, computational biochemist, and (above all) computer scientist.CACM Staff From Communications of the ACM | October 2009
The biosciences need an image format capable of high performance and long-term maintenance. Is HDF5 the answer?
Matthew T. Dougherty, Michael J. Folk, Erez Zadok, Herbert J. Bernstein, Frances C. Bernstein, Kevin W. Eliceiri, Werner Benger, Christoph Best From Communications of the ACM | October 2009
GPU acceleration and other computer performance increases will offer critical benefits to biomedical science.James C. Phillips, John E. Stone From Communications of the ACM | October 2009