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Play Your Way to Work With Interactive Games
From ACM TechNews

Play Your Way to Work With Interactive Games

New interactive games are designed to make commuting to work more of an entertaining experience, with possible application toward boosting the efficiency of transport...

Beer-Pouring Robot Programmed to Anticipate Human Actions
From ACM Careers

Beer-Pouring Robot Programmed to Anticipate Human Actions

A team from Cornell University has created a robot that can foresee human actions based on past observations and can step in to offer a helping hand.

Graphics Gurus Master Wispy Hair, Snowballs, Torn Paper
From ACM News

Graphics Gurus Master Wispy Hair, Snowballs, Torn Paper

The computer graphics industry has an insatiable appetite for realism, and researchers next month will show how they plan to feed it with innovations in computerized...

Just Look Me in the Eye Already
From ACM Careers

Just Look Me in the Eye Already

You're having a conversation with someone and suddenly his eyes drop to his smartphone or drift over your shoulder toward someone else. 

A Legacy Feud in Tech
From ACM Careers

A Legacy Feud in Tech

If the Hatfields and McCoys lived in Silicon Valley, they'd be fighting with piles of cash and lines of software code instead of knives and shotguns.

Xbox? More Like Xbody: Future Game Consoles Will Get ­nder Your Skin
From ACM News

Xbox? More Like Xbody: Future Game Consoles Will Get ­nder Your Skin

Imagine playing through a level of the popular zombie shooter "Left 4 Dead" on a system that tracks your heart rate, eye movements, even how clammy your skin is...

Government Plan to Build 'back Doors' For Online Surveillance Could Create Dangerous Vulnerabilities
From ACM Opinion

Government Plan to Build 'back Doors' For Online Surveillance Could Create Dangerous Vulnerabilities

Recently, the FBI has been attacking the "going dark" problem—that is, its inability to read all electronic communications—from both legal and technological angles...

Inside Google's Secret Lab
From ACM Careers

Inside Google's Secret Lab

Last February, Astro Teller, the director of Google's secretive research lab, Google X, went to seek approval from Chief Executive Officer Larry Page for an unlikely...

Google Blimps Will Carry Wireless Signal Across Africa
From ACM Careers

Google Blimps Will Carry Wireless Signal Across Africa

Search giant Google intends to build huge wireless networks across Africa and Asia, using high-altitude balloons and blimps.

German Railways to Test Anti-Graffiti Drones
From ACM News

German Railways to Test Anti-Graffiti Drones

The idea is to use airborne infra-red cameras to collect evidence, which could then be used to prosecute vandals who deface property at night.

Students Perform Well Regardless of Reading Print or Digital Books, Research Shows
From ACM Careers

Students Perform Well Regardless of Reading Print or Digital Books, Research Shows

Students did equally well on a test whether reading from a digital book or a printed one, according to research by Jim Johnson, an Indiana State University doctoral...

Can Patents Keep ­p with Technology?
From ACM Opinion

Can Patents Keep ­p with Technology?


Building Supercomputers with Raspberries
From ACM News

Building Supercomputers with Raspberries

At some point in the not-too-distant future, building powerful, miniature computing systems will be considered a hobby for high schoolers, just as robotics or even...

An Honor For the Creator of the Gif
From ACM Careers

An Honor For the Creator of the Gif

Among the thousands of file formats that exist in modern computing, the GIF, or Graphics Interchange Format, has attained celebrity status in a sea of lesser-known...

Meet the Man Who Sold a Month-Old App to Dropbox For $100m
From ACM Opinion

Meet the Man Who Sold a Month-Old App to Dropbox For $100m

When Mailbox sold itself to Dropbox for a reported $100 million or so this March, the month-old iPhone app wasn’t even available to the public.

Technion Scientists Develop Advanced Biological Computer
From ACM Careers

Technion Scientists Develop Advanced Biological Computer

Using only biomolecules, Israeli scientists have developed and constructed an advanced biological transducer, a computing machine capable of manipulating genetic...

Drones May Violate International Law
From ACM Careers

Drones May Violate International Law

President Obama recently defended U.S. use of drones to combat terrorism, but Leila Sadat, professor of law at Washington University in St. Louis, argues that...

Hackers Find China Is Land of Opportunity
From ACM Careers

Hackers Find China Is Land of Opportunity

Name a target anywhere in China, an official at a state-owned company boasted recently, and his crack staff will break into that person's computer, download the...

What Will Hackers Do with the New Kinect?
From ACM Careers

What Will Hackers Do with the New Kinect?

Microsoft announced a new version of the Xbox One earlier this week, and with it an improved and essentially reinvented version of Kinect, the company's body- and...

One Day Your Phone Will Know If You're Happy or Sad
From ACM Careers

One Day Your Phone Will Know If You're Happy or Sad

As much time as we spend with our cell phones and laptops and tablets, it's still pretty much a one-way relationship.
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