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ACM and the Professional Programmer: How do you, the reader, stay informed about research that influences your work?

Published:01 July 2014Publication History
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Abstract

In the very early days of computing, professional programming was nearly synonymous with academic research because computers tended to be devices that existed only or largely in academic settings. As computers became commercially available, they began to be found in private-sector, business environments. The 1950s and 1960s brought computing in the form of automation and data processing to the private sector and, along with this came a growing community of professionals whose focus on computing was pragmatic and production oriented. Computing was (and still is) evolving, and the academic community continued to explore new software and hardware concepts and constructs. New languages were invented (and are still being invented) to try new ideas in the formulation of programs. The introduction of time sharing created new territory to explore. In today’s world cloud computing is the new time sharing, more or less.

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  1. ACM and the Professional Programmer: How do you, the reader, stay informed about research that influences your work?

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      • Published in

        cover image Queue
        Queue  Volume 12, Issue 7
        Practice
        July 2014
        43 pages
        ISSN:1542-7730
        EISSN:1542-7749
        DOI:10.1145/2639988
        Issue’s Table of Contents

        Copyright © 2014 ACM

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        Association for Computing Machinery

        New York, NY, United States

        Publication History

        • Published: 1 July 2014

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