Generated by GPT-5-mini| ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review | |
|---|---|
| Title | ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review |
| Discipline | Computer networking |
| Abbreviation | CCR |
| Publisher | Association for Computing Machinery |
| Country | United States |
| Frequency | Quarterly |
| History | 1970s–present |
ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review is a quarterly periodical published by the Association for Computing Machinery's Special Interest Group on Data Communication, covering advances in computer networking, Internet architecture, and communication systems. It functions as both a scholarly venue and a community forum, bridging research reported at conferences such as SIGCOMM, INFOCOM, and NSDI with broader discussions found at venues like HotNets, SOSP, and OSDI. The Review frequently highlights work connected to projects at institutions including MIT, Stanford University, University of California, Berkeley, and Carnegie Mellon University, and organizations such as Cisco Systems, IBM Research, Google, and Microsoft Research.
The publication traces its roots to the early networking efforts of ARPA and DARPA alongside seminal developments at Xerox PARC, Bell Labs, and BBN Technologies during the 1970s and 1980s. Early issues reflected topics debated at workshops that included contributors from the Internet Engineering Task Force, the International Telecommunication Union, and the World Wide Web Consortium. Over ensuing decades the Review chronicled milestones associated with TCP/IP, the development of Ethernet at Xerox PARC and DEC, the commercialization efforts by AT&T and Lucent Technologies, and the expansion of research agendas at institutions such as ETH Zurich, University of Cambridge, and the University of Illinois Urbana–Champaign. Key personalities and groups appearing in its pages have included researchers affiliated with publications and awards like the Turing Award, SIGCOMM Award, Marconi Prize, and the ACM Fellows program.
Content spans experimental studies reported at conferences like SIGMETRICS, CoNEXT, and CCR workshops, as well as position papers influenced by standards deliberations at the Internet Engineering Task Force, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, and the European Telecommunications Standards Institute. The Review often features articles addressing protocols born from RFCs originating in the IETF and discussions tied to infrastructure managed by operators such as AT&T, Verizon, and Deutsche Telekom. Topics intersect with projects and laboratories at Princeton University, Columbia University, Georgia Tech, and the University of Washington, and draw on technologies from vendors including Juniper Networks, Huawei, Nokia, and Ericsson. The Review also publishes retrospectives related to milestones like the Mosaic browser, the DNS foundation work at USC/ISI, and the evolution of wireless systems stemming from Qualcomm and Nokia Bell Labs research.
Produced under the auspices of the Association for Computing Machinery and SIGCOMM, the Review is distributed to members and libraries alongside proceedings from SIGGRAPH, SIGMOD, and SIGPLAN, and is archived in digital libraries alongside volumes associated with the ACM Digital Library. Distribution reaches subscribers at universities and labs such as the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard University, Yale University, and the National Institute of Standards and Technology, as well as corporate research centers at Intel Labs, Facebook Research, Amazon Web Services, and Oracle Labs. Special issues have been coordinated with major meetings like the International Conference on Network Protocols, the ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles, and the USENIX Annual Technical Conference.
Editorial leadership traditionally comprises academics and industry researchers drawn from institutions like Stanford University, Princeton University, Cornell University, and the University of California system, and companies such as Cisco, Google, and Microsoft. The Review's editorial model blends invited articles, contributed technical reports, and workshop summaries reviewed by editorial committees including members from SIGCOMM, IEEE Communications Society, and the Internet Research Task Force. Peer review practices align with norms found at venues such as the ACM Special Interest Group conferences and journals, involving program committees similar to those for NSDI, ICDCS, and INFOCOM, and contributors who have appeared at award-bearing forums like the IEEE INFOCOM Test of Time and ACM Recognition of Service awards.
The Review frequently publishes special issues tied to flagship meetings including SIGCOMM, HotNets, and CoNEXT, and curates invited collections from workshops such as the Workshop on Hot Topics in Networks, the ACM Workshop on Mobile Computing Systems and Applications, and the USENIX Workshop on Hot Topics in Operating Systems. Collaborations have linked special issues to themes from the Computer History Museum, the ACM History Committee, and commemorative sessions for milestones like the 50th anniversary of ARPANET and centennial events hosted by institutions such as the Royal Society and the IEEE History Center.
The Review serves as a visible outlet for both cutting-edge research previews and reflective pieces that influence policy discussions engaging stakeholders such as the Federal Communications Commission, the European Commission, and national research agencies. Articles from the Review are cited alongside seminal works published in journals and proceedings from venues like Nature Communications, Communications of the ACM, and IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, and have informed deployments at major operators including Google Fiber, Comcast, and Telefonica. Its influence is evident in curricular materials at universities such as UC Berkeley, Imperial College London, and the University of Toronto, and in technical roadmaps crafted by consortia like the Open Networking Foundation and the IETF community.
Category:Association for Computing Machinery publications Category:Computer networking publications Category:Academic journals established in the 20th century