Go to https://dl.acm.org/conferences
Click on the Conference with the subject area that interest you, like "Hypertext and Hypermedia" (https://dl.acm.org/conference/ht)
Scroll down to "Most Popular" and sort by either Downloads or Cited.
Go bananas with reading everything.
It's a fiendishly difficult problem to get around, but Dean proposes a few mechanisms. I learned a lot and think back to this paper often when designing real software.
Reading it will probably make you a better engineer.
- Print and online "Communications of the ACM" magazine
- Safari Books subscription included - all 40,000 books (!)
- Online courses, webinars, special interest group conferences
- Full ACM Digital Library (only with the all-access membership option - $198)
[1] https://services.acm.org/public/qj/keep_inventing/qjprofm_co...
note: the promo code in the URL came on a Google search, and seems to give a 25% discount for first year (which is higher than on the site directly). I have no affiliation with ACM other than being a happy subscriber
1979 reprint: https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/1113634.1113638
The easiest way is to search for the paper on Google Scholar and see if there is a link that says "[PDF]" or "All X versions".
- MapReduce: Simplified Data Processing on Large Clusters by Jeff Dean et al.
- The Design Philosophy of the DARPA Internet Protocols by David D. Clark
- Chord: A Scalable Peer-to-peer Lookup Service for Internet Applications by Ion Stoica et al.
This was an issue that came around the time I was starting my dive into agents after reading [1] and it showed me my particular interest is a small part of what other people label the area.
1) https://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.123...