ACM NDC Study

Survey of Non-doctoral-granting Academic Departments in Computing

The ACM NDC Study is the first-ever ACM-sponsored national survey of non-doctoral granting 4-year institutions in Computer Science, Computer Engineering, Information Systems, Information Technology, and Software Engineering. The survey is adapted from the annual Taulbee Survey of Ph.D.-granting institutions conducted by the Computing Research Association (CRA) as well as SIGCSE-sponsored TauRUs surveys.

2017-2018 ACM NDC Study

2016-2017 ACM NDC Study

2015-2016 ACM NDC Study

2014-2015 ACM NDC Study

2013-2014 ACM NDC Study

2012-2013 ACM NDC Study

Edge Computing

ACM Queue’s “Research for Practice” is your number one resource for keeping up with emerging developments in the world of theory and applying them to the challenges you face on a daily basis. RfP consistently serves up expert-curated guides to the best of CS research, and relates these breakthroughs to the challenges that software engineers face every day. In this installment of RfP is by Nitesh Mor, a PhD candidate at UC Berkeley working on the next generation of globally distributed computer systems with a special focus on data security and privacy. Titled “Edge Computing,” this RfP gives an overview of some of the most exciting work being done in the area of computing infrastructures and applications. It provides an academic view of edge computing through samples of existing research whose applications will be highly relevant in the coming years.

ACM Case Studies

Written by leading domain experts for software engineers, ACM Case Studies provide an in-depth look at how software teams overcome specific challenges by implementing new technologies, adopting new practices, or a combination of both. Often through first-hand accounts, these pieces explore what the challenges were, the tools and techniques that were used to combat them, and the solution that was achieved.

Why I Belong to ACM

Hear from Bryan Cantrill, vice president of engineering at Joyent, Ben Fried chief information officer at Google, and Theo Schlossnagle, OmniTI founder on why they are members of ACM.