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XRDS, Volume 22
Volume 22, Number 1, Fall 2015
Letter from the editors
- Sean Follmer:

Deep dreams are made of these. 5-6
- Pedro Lopes

:
Our virtual reality revolution: this time it's for real. 9-10
- Marius Tudor Benea:

Writing your dissertation. 11
- Claudia Schulz:

Excellence around the world. 12-13
- Jay Patel:

Virtual reality device developments. 13
- Natalie Gordon:

In praise of side projects. 14-15
- Olivia Simpson:

From novice to expert: the art of science of pedagogy. 16-17
- Diego Martínez Plasencia

:
One step beyond virtual reality: connecting past and future developments. 18-23 - Adalberto Lafcadio Simeone

, Eduardo Velloso
:
Substitutional reality: bringing virtual reality home. 24-29 - Pedro Lopes

, Alexandra Ion
, Robert Kovacs:
Using your own muscles: realistic physical experiences in VR. 30-35 - Ken Perlin:

Eccescopy: to look, is to see. 36-39 - Daniel Boland, Mark McGill:

Lost in the rift: engaging with mixed reality. 40-45 - Lisa Rebenitsch

:
Managing cybersickness in virtual reality. 46-51 - Robert Konrad:

What is the vergence-accommodation conflict and how do we fix it? 52-55 - Alain Boulay:

VR to the rescue: avoiding danger with mine disaster simulations. 56-59 - Adrian Scoica:

Profile Susumu Tachi: the scientist who invented telexistence. 61-62
- Andrea Stevenson Won:

The virtual human interaction lab: Stanford, California. 64-65
- Finn Kuusisto:

VR head-mounted displays. 65
- Lara Zupan, Marinka Zitnik:

Sorry kids, Iron Man's superpowers aren't unique. 66-67
Volume 22, Number 2, Winter 2015
- Sean Follmer:

Back to the future - : building a great grad research lab. 5-6
- Exploring innovation. 8

- Laurynas Riliskis:

A new revolution is underway. 9-10
- Marius Tudor Benea:

Addressing academic publishing. 11
- Vassilis Kalantzis:

Fortifying computing in student societies: A focus on outreach initiatives. 12-13
- Jay Patel:

The timeline of things. 13
- Kayalvizhi Jayavel:

Women who paved the way for IoT: A teacher finds her voice. 14-15
- Madison Capps:

Energy and IOT: An engineer's perspective. 16-17
- Nur Al-huda Hamdan:

Why "celebrate women in computing"? 18-19 - Patrik Jonell, Pedro Lopes

:
Affordance++: the tale of animating IoT objects. 20-21
- George F. Hurlburt:

The internet of things... of all things. 22-26 - Vinton G. Cerf:

Prospects for the internet of things. 28-31 - Jonathan Caras:

The genie in the machines. 32-35 - Alyssa B. Apsel, Enkhbayasgalan Gantsog:

Global synchronization and the challenges of building network awareness. 36-39 - Michael Andersen:

Trends in internet of things platforms. 40-43 - Daniel de Leng:

Querying flying robots and other things: ontology-supported stream reasoning. 44-47 - Hossein Shafagh:

Toward computing over encrypted data in IoT systems. 48-52 - Luigi De Russis

:
The ambient intelligence course at Politecnico di Torino. 54-57 - Bryant Eastham:

Panasonic and the OpenDOF project: open-source vision in a large company. 58-61 - Florian Michahelles, Simon Mayer:

Toward a web of systems. 62-67
- Adrian Scoica:

Matthew Pryor: using tech to manage droughts, from Australia to California. 68-69
- Teodoro Montanaro

:
SWARM joint open lab Politecnico Di Torino, Italy. 70-71
- Finn Kuusisto:

IP addresses. 71
- Lara Zupan, Marinka Zitnik:

According to sensor 22, Benny is preparing dinner. 72-74
Volume 22, Number 3, Spring 2016
Letter from the editors
- Jennifer Jacobs:

Supporting creativity, expressiveness and complexity through personal fabrication. 5-7
- XRDS staff updates. 8

- Stefanie Mueller, Nadya Peek:

Digital fabrication: a human-machine interface for advanced manufacturing. 9-10
- Andrew J. Hunsucker:

How to deal with negative critique. 11
- David Byrd:

RIT SIGCHI: Democratizing digitization, campus outreach, and more. 12-13
- Jack Minardi:

How to get hired at a startup as a software developer. 14-15
- Jay Patel:

Additive manufacturing. 15
- Andrew J. Hunsucker:

Exploring virtual reality-are we there yet? 16-20
- Amit Zoran:

A manifest for digital imperfection. 22-27 - Ilan E. Moyer:

Personal fabrication: from automated machines to augmented tools. 28-31 - Stelian Coros:

Creating animated characters for the physical world. 32-37 - Andrew Spielberg, Alanson P. Sample, Scott E. Hudson, Jennifer Mankoff

, James McCann:
Building a toolkit for fabricating interactive objects. 38-43 - Valkyrie Savage

:
3-D printing interactive objects. 44-48 - Huaishu Peng, Scott E. Hudson, Jennifer Mankoff

, James McCann:
Soft printing with fabric. 50-53 - James Coleman

, Craig Long, Andrew Manto
, Trygve Wastvedt:
Lots of parts, lots of formats, lots of headache. 54-57 - Jesse Louis-Rosenberg:

Drowning in triangle soup: the quest for a better 3-D printing file format. 58-62 - Daniel Cellucci, Kenneth C. Cheung:

Island three revisited: O'Neill cylinders and digital materials. 64-67 - David Rejeski:

3-D printing: green or not? 68-69 - Erin Buehler

:
Fabrication lends a hand: creating custom assistive technology. 70-75 - Adrian Scoica:

Profile Dennis Bormann: The man who introduced Antarctica's Davis Station to 3-D printing. 76-77
- Feras Alsaggaf, Javier Villarroel, Billy Wong:

Design Informatics Lab: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 78-79
- Asmaa Rabie:

The emergence of 3-D printing. 79
- Marinka Zitnik:

The Brownian wanderlust of things. 81-89
Volume 22, Number 4, Summer 2016
Letter from the editors
- Okke Schrijvers:

Impractical, impossible, and interdisciplinary: pushing the boundaries of computer science. 5-6
- Ahmed Ansari, Raghavendra Kandala:

The center and the periphery: beyond Eurocentrism. 7-8
- Andrew J. Hunsucker:

Why you need Allies as a Ph.D. 9
- David Byrd:

ACM TEC GDA addresses Mexico's social needs one app at a time. 10-11
- Jay Patel:

Technology worldwide. 11
- Harry Lachenmayer:

What's in the job of making music? 12-13
- Abdelrahman Hosny:

Is your research reproducible? 14-15
- Syed Mustafa Ali

:
A brief introduction to decolonial computing. 16-21 - Nicola J. Bidwell:

Decolonising HCI and interaction design discourse: some considerations in planning AfriCHI. 22-27 - Luiza Prado de Oliveira Martins

, Pedro J. S. Vieira de Oliveira:
Breaking the cycle of Macondo: design and decolonial futures. 28-32 - Rahul Bhatia:

A tale of two cities, real and imagined. 33-35 - Jennifer Jacobs:

Negotiating science, technology, culture, and religion: the art and ideas of Laleh Mehran. 36-41 - Ahmed Ansari, Raghavendra Kandala:

Jian Guan on design and innovation in China. 42-45 - Frederick M. C. van Amstel

, Rodrigo Freese Gonzatto
:
Design Livre: designing locally, cannibalizing globally. 46-50
- Adrian Scoica:

Profile Sanny Gaddafi : Living at the forefront of Indonesia's tech emancipation. 52-53
- Johanna Schacht:

Meeting point: the computer lab. 54-55
- Asmaa Rabie:

India's reforms leave a lasting mark. 55
- Abhineet Saxena:

Convolutional neural networks: an illustration in TensorFlow. 56-58

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