I received two "Dear Colleague" letters over the
weekend. Jennette Wing, current head of the Computer &
Information Science & Engineering directorate at NSF, describes
the restructuring of CISE including a new Algorithmic Foundations
program, of interest to many readers of this blog. Many program
solicitations have already been posted
with deadlines much earlier than in previous years.
Moshe Vardi tells us that we all
ought to join the ACM, partly to help support the main computer
science society, but also because now you will receive the new
redesigned Communications of the ACM
under Vardi's editorialship.
ACM serves two very different communities, academic computer scientists
and practicing computer professionals. The flagship magazine, CACM,
has to cater to both groups to succeed. The old CACM mostly had
articles around some common topic written by academics, aimed at
practitioners and not fitting the needs of either group.
So how is the new CACM? The first redesigned issue (July) just came
out and is available online. It
hasn't reached the full vision but does give a taste with some
opinionated pieces on topics from XML to quantum computing. It also
has interviews with Donald Knuth and the Turing award winners.
Definitely an improvement but I didn't find any articles that truly
excited me. If CACM hopes to become the "first magazine I want to
read each month," it will have to take more risks, producing
articles that give new perspectives to up and coming topics in
computer science and lead the field instead of just reporting on it.