Outstanding Chapter Website Submissions
Thank you to our panel of judges for agreeing to help us out!
We hope that this set up will allow for a smooth and efficient judging process. Following each list of submissions is the rubric for judging that specific category. If you have any questions or concerns throughout this process, please do not hesitate to contact Sunita Jaswal, local_activities@hq.acm.org.
Listed below is a brief description of what we expect, followed by each chapters' submission.
Oustanding Chapter Website - 14 Chapter Submissions
Chapters should apply to the Outstanding Chapter Website category if they have maintained an outstanding chapter website. They should tell us about the design and content as well as any noteworthy features. They should explain how it was created and how it is kept up to date. A URL must be provided!
Bharati Vidyapeeth's College of Engineering ACM Student Chapter
BITS Pilani-Rajasthan ACM Student Chapter
Helwan University ACM Student Chapter
Pontificia Universidad Javeriana ACM Student Chapter
Santa Clara University ACM Student Chapter
University of Florida ACM-W Student Chapter
University of Lahore ACM Student Chapter
University of Virginia ACM-W Student Chapter
Outstanding Chapter Website Scoring Rubric
The DevOps Phenomenon
ACM Queue’s “Research for Practice” serves up expert-curated guides to the best of computing research, and relates these breakthroughs to the challenges that software engineers face every day. This installment, “The DevOps Phenomenon” by Anna Wiedemann, Nicole Forsgren, Manuel Wiesche, Heiko Gewald and Helmut Krcmar, gives an overview of stories from across the industry about software organizations overcoming early hurdles of adopting DevOps practices, and coming out on the other side with tighter integration between software and operations teams, faster delivery times for new software features, and achieving higher levels of stability.

ACM Case Studies
Written by leading domain experts for software engineers, ACM Case Studies provide an in-depth look at how software teams overcome specific challenges by implementing new technologies, adopting new practices, or a combination of both. Often through first-hand accounts, these pieces explore what the challenges were, the tools and techniques that were used to combat them, and the solution that was achieved.

Why I Belong to ACM
Hear from Bryan Cantrill, vice president of engineering at Joyent, Ben Fried chief information officer at Google, and Theo Schlossnagle, OmniTI founder on why they are members of ACM.