The ACM DL offers users a wealth of information in the form of conference proceedings, magazines, newsletters, and technical journals in the fields of computing. These resources are available in full text and range from the first to the most current ACM publications. Overall the ACM DL is a good database that is easy to use and has diverse functionality. Searching procedures are straight forward with a minimal learning curve. There are several options for refining a search to locate other relevant articles. Features such as the "find similar articles," "peer to peer," and "collaborative colleagues" are a couple of the options available to help users locate other relevant ACM publications on a topic. Even with all of its benefits, the ACM DL does have a few drawbacks. For example, users who access the DL through an institutional subscription do not have the ability to save search results where members with individual subscriptions do have the ability to use this service. Also the results of a search are limited to displaying only the top 200 results. Because most users are not going to wade through more than 200 citations this is probably a mute point. The ACM DL is a resource that all academic libraries with active computer science and electrical engineering departments should subscribe to. ACM's pricing structure and licensing policy are both fair and easy to work with. They are continuing to improve both the interface, search features, saving features and exporting abilities such as downloading to EndNote, which they are working on as referenced on their help page. Continued feedback by users will make this an even more valuable tool than it is now as ACM continues to work on their user interface. Hopefully in the near future they will allow institutional subscribers access to the My Binder feature.