USENIX, the Advance Computing Systems Association is another professional society Nick Feamster participates in. According to their website these are their goals:
- to foster technical excellence and innovation
- to support and disseminate research with a practical bias
- provide a neutral forum for discussion of technical issues
- encourage computing outreach into the community at large
Conference proceedings are available for free through USENIX's online library and papers are refereed. The 'call for papers' links provide specific submission requirements.
Other associations are:
IEEE which formerly was known as the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. but evolved beyond its initials because of the multidisciplinary nature of its participants. Also has conferences, numerous publications and student memberships.
NANOG (North American Network Operators Group) "an educational and operational forum for the coordination and dissemination of technical information related to backbone/enterprise networking technologies and operational practices."Also conferences, programs, mailing list,...
Hey thanks for the help on babel fish, and you're right it is a little rough but at least it's a start! I really can't believe that I've never come across that before. It does open up a lot of options though. Thanks again! Oh and doing an overview of which organizations Nick Feamster participates in is a really good idea. It really gives one a wider perspective.
ReplyDeleteMy scientist similiarly references sources from ACM and IEEE. It is true that IEEE is multidisciplinary and has a variety of conferences and publications that are attributed to it. Have you found a way to navigate through the IEEE website and find which particular sources your scientist uses? Mine seems to cite from a variety of IEEE-sponsored conferences and publications.
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