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XRDS, Volume 24
Volume 24, Number 1, Fall 2017
- Okke Schrijvers:
Crossroads. 5-7
- Yannai A. Gonczarowski, Gustavo Fortes Tondello:
Incentives and gamification. 9-11
- Andrew J. Hunsucker:
How to deal with stress as a Ph.D. student. 12-13
- Alok Pandey:
A brief history of gamification. 13
- Anshuman Majumdar:
MacACM: encouraging competitive programming via mentorship and outreach. 14-15
- Zach Boyd:
When communication trumps coding. 16
- Dimitris Mitropoulos:
How 1 million app calls can tell you a bit about malware. 17-19
- Rad Niazadeh:
Algorithms versus mechanisms: how to cope with strategic input? 20-23 - Nisarg Shah:
Making the world fairer. 24-28 - Gali Noti:
Do humans play equilibrium?: modeling human behavior in computational strategic systems. 29-33 - Rachel Cummings:
Differential privacy as a tool for truthfulness in games. 34-37 - Aleksandrs Slivkins:
Incentivizing exploration via information asymmetry. 38-41 - Jennifer Wortman Vaughan:
Incentives and the crowd. 42-46 - Lennart E. Nacke:
Games user research and gamification in human-computer interaction. 48-51 - Dennis L. Kappen, Rita Orji:
Gamified and persuasive systems as behavior change agents for health and wellness. 52-55 - Andrzej Marczewski:
The ethics of gamification. 56-59
- Adrian Scoica:
Jeremy Irish: bringing treasure hunting to the modern world. 60-61
- Leo Holsti:
The future of sports and exercise: Aalto University game research group. 62-63
- Vasileios Kalantzis:
Gamification and customer loyalty. 63
- Mihai Maruseac:
Haskell a language for modern times. 64-66
Volume 24, Number 2, Winter 2017
Letter from the editors
- Jennifer Jacobs:
Multidisciplinary systems engineering. 5-6
- Alex A. Ahmed, Teresa Almeida:
Human to human. 7-9
- Nisha Panwar, Shantanu Sharma:
The excessive power of Ctrl+C and Ctrl+V in CS research and career development. 10-11
- Anshuman Majumdar:
ADA ACM's role in diversifying chapter activities. 12-13
- Jenn Schiffer:
Software is for humans : Holding our industry accountable. 14-15
- Alok Pandey:
Technology and dating. 15
- Talia Kohen:
ElectroEuro: a virtual coin that can decarbonize. 16-17
- Alexander DeForge:
Interfacing an FPGA with an external circuit and applications. 18-20
- Ari Schlesinger:
Can we build the cyborg future we all deserve? 22-25 - Oliver L. Haimson:
Digital and physical barriers to changing identities. 26-29 - Cynthia L. Bennett:
Disability-disclosure preferences and practices in online dating communities. 30-33 - Joslenne Pena:
Leveraging personal experience for academic research and outreach. 34-37 - Lesley Mitchell:
Gender and the art of community relations. 38-42 - Margaret Rhee:
Reflecting on robots, love, and poetry. 44-46 - Angelika Strohmayer, Janis Lena Meissner:
"We had tough times, but we've sort of sewn our way through it: the partnership quilt. 48-51
- Adrian Scoica:
Sara Mauskopf : Innovative thinking in the service of parents. 52-53
- David M. Markowitz:
Social and psychological questions about humans and technology : The Stanford Social Media Lab. 54-55
- Vasileios Kalantzis:
Equality through digital technology. 55
- Alexandra Schofield, Thomas Davidson:
Identifying hate speech in social media. 56-59
Volume 24, Number 3, Spring 2018
- Jennifer Jacobs:
Finding the edge: Art and automation. 5-6
- Emily L. Spratt:
Computers and art in the age of machine learning. 8-20
- Andrew J. Hunsucker:
You are not "just" your Ph.D.: How to be yourself. 11
- Anshuman Majumdar:
The Hour of Code: An initiative to break the barriers of coding. 12-13
- Alok Pandey:
The evolution of music technology. 13
- Caleb Madrigal:
Getting the CS job you deserve: How to move onward and upward. 14-15
- Molly Wright Steenson:
Why architecture and artificial intelligence? 16-19 - Louisa Wood Ruby, Samantha Deutch:
Harnessing technology for art history at the Frick Art Reference Library. 20-23 - Benoit Seguin:
The Replica Project: Building a visual search engine for art historians. 24-29 - Shiry Ginosar, Xi Shen, Karan Dwivedi, Elizabeth Honig, Mathieu Aubry:
The burgeoning computer-art symbiosis. 30-33 - Emily L. Spratt:
Creation, curation, and classification: Mario Klingemann and Emily L. Spratt in conversation. 34-43 - Daniel Temkin:
The visual impact of sound: Glitchometry. 44-49 - Jarno Eerola:
The story of Aitokaiku: Utilizing artificial intelligence for music. 50-53 - Seda Röder:
Rethinking creativity. 54-59
- Bryan Knowles:
Coraline Ada Ehmke : Promoting richer open source communities. 60-61
- Pedro Lopes:
The next generation of interactive devices : Human Computer Interaction Lab, Hasso Plattner Institute. 62-63
- Oana Niculaescu:
A primer on differential privacy. 65-67
- Vasileios Kalantzis:
Do digital computers dream? 67
Volume 24, Number 4, Summer 2018
- Gierad Laput:
Paying it forward. 5-6
- Vasilis Ververis, Gunnar E. Wolf:
Pseudonimity and anonymity as tools for regaining privacy. 7-8
- Parang Saraf:
How to find relevant papers: thinking like a researcher. 9
- Anshuman Majumdar:
UPES ACM: developing skills to survive the IT job market. 10-11
- Alok Pandey:
A history of data breaches. 11
- Charles Clancy:
So you want to be an elite hacker? finding your career in cyber operations. 12-13
- Gunnar E. Wolf:
On earthquakes, lakes, and sensors. 14-15
- Vasilis Ververis:
Demistifying the dark web. 16-19 - Stefania Milan:
Autonomous infrastructure for a suckless internet. 20-23 - Jack Grigg:
The principle of least authority: how capabilities can improve internet-scale privacy. 24-26 - Niels ten Oever, Davide Beraldo:
Routes to rights: internet architecture and values in times of ossification and commercialization. 28-31 - Kali Kaneko:
Stop looking over our shoulders! 32-36 - Holger Krekel, Karissa McKelvey, Emil Lefherz:
How to fix email: making communication encrypted and decentralized with autocrypt. 37-39 - Christoph Kerschbaumer, Luke Crouch, Tom Ritter, Tanvi Vyas:
Can we build a privacy-preserving web browser we all deserve? 40-44 - carlo von lynX:
The case for regulating social networks and the internet. 46-49
- Bryan Knowles:
Christopher Sheats founder of the Emerald Onion. 50-51
- Sepideh Maleki:
Encrypting a functionality: Crypto Lab, University of Texas at Austin. 52-53
- Vasileios Kalantzis:
Anonymity: from Plato to Tor. 53
- Oana Niculaescu:
Classifying data with decision trees. 55-57
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