Submission deadline: CLOSED
Publication: September/October 2018
Guest editors: Barry Schneider (National Institute of Standards and Technology) and Rudolf E... Read More »
By Lori Cameron and Michael Martinez
If Google wants more women engineers—and possibly avoid the embarrassing debacle over an internal memo claiming that biolo... Read More »
Because they are less likely to pursue computer science as a career or, at the very least, as a significant part of their high school and college coursework, wo... Read More »
Submission and publication: Ongoing
Track editors: Lorena A. Barba (George Washington University) and George K. Thiruvathukal (Loyola University Chicago)
Sinc... Read More »
Early exposure, access to rigorous computing classes, and having friends who are also interested in computing go a long way toward getting young women intereste... Read More »
By Lori Cameron
It’s no secret that tech is bursting with brand new, well-paying middle class jobs, but one group has been disturbingly excluded from the bon... Read More »
The US Department of Energy (DOE) has partnered with the National Cancer Institute (NCI) to use DOE supercomputers to aid in the fight against cancer.
Read art... Read More »
Ask Richard F. Martin, physics professor at Illinois State University, about the state of computational physics education, and he’ll tell you it needs improveme... Read More »
Submission deadline: CLOSED
Publication: May/June 2018
Guest editors: Joan Adler (Technion-IIT, Haifa, Israel) and Esteban Mocskos (Universidad de Buenos Aires... Read More »
The “end of Moore's law” will open a new era in information technology as research and development shifts from technological miniaturization to new devices, int... Read More »
Physics, medicine, astronomy — these and other hard sciences share a common need for efficient algorithms, system software, and computer architecture to address large computational problems. And yet, useful advances in computational techniques that could benefit many researchers are rarely shared. To meet that need, Computing in Science & Engineering (CiSE) presents scientific and computational contributions in a clear and accessible format.