acm-header
Sign In

Communications of the ACM

Careers


Featured Job
bg-corner

Engineers Mix and Match Materials to Make New Stretchy Electronics
From ACM Careers

Engineers Mix and Match Materials to Make New Stretchy Electronics

A process developed by a team from multiple universities may be the key to manufacturing flexible stacked and three-dimensional electronic structures with multiple...

The Talent Shortage in Quantum Computing
From ACM Careers

The Talent Shortage in Quantum Computing

William Oliver says a lack of available quantum scientists and engineers may be an inhibitor of the technology's growth.

Engineers Produce Smallest 3-D Transistor Yet
From ACM Careers

Engineers Produce Smallest 3-D Transistor Yet

Researchers from MIT and the University of Colorado fabricated a 3-D transistor that's less than half the size of today's smallest commercial models using a microfabrication...

E.T., We're Home
From ACM Careers

E.T., We're Home

Existing laser technology could be fashioned into Earth's "porch light" to attract alien astronomers, an MIT study says.

Engineers Design Artificial Synapse For 'brain-on-a-Chip' Hardware
From ACM News

Engineers Design Artificial Synapse For 'brain-on-a-Chip' Hardware

When it comes to processing power, the human brain just can't be beat.

Chasing Complexity
From ACM Careers

Chasing Complexity

Ryan Williams has taken a key step toward solving P vs. NP, the biggest problem in theoretical computer science.

New System Allows Optical 'deep Learning'
From ACM Careers

New System Allows Optical 'deep Learning'

A team of researchers has developed a new approach to "deep learning" computations using light instead of electricity, which they say could vastly improve the speed...

Teaching Robots to Teach Other Robots
From ACM News

Teaching Robots to Teach Other Robots

Most robots are programmed using one of two methods: learning from demonstration, in which they watch a task being done and then replicate it, or via motion-planning...

Not Stuck on Silicon
From ACM Careers

Not Stuck on Silicon

A technique developed by MIT engineers may vastly reduce the overall cost of semiconductor wafer technology and enable devices made from more exotic, higher-performing...

Toward 'valleytronic' Devices For Data Storage or Computer Logic Systems
From ACM Careers

Toward 'valleytronic' Devices For Data Storage or Computer Logic Systems

Researchers have discovered a new way of using laser light to tune electronic energy levels in two-dimensional films of crystal.

Toward Practical Quantum Computers
From ACM Careers

Toward Practical Quantum Computers

Built-in optics could enable chips that use trapped ions as quantum bits.

Exploring Networks Efficiently
From ACM Careers

Exploring Networks Efficiently

Analysis of ant colony behavior could yield better algorithms for network communication.

3-D Printing 101
From ACM Careers

3-D Printing 101

It's been more than 30 years since the invention of 3-D printing, and yet in some ways the technology is still a frontier of unexplored potential.

Researchers Find Unexpected Magnetic Effect
From ACM Careers

Researchers Find Unexpected Magnetic Effect

The discovery of an unexpected magnetic effect in a combination of thin-film materials could open up a new pathway to advanced electronic devices and even robust...

Making Electronics Out of Coal
From ACM Careers

Making Electronics Out of Coal

Instead of just burning coal, MIT Professor Jeffrey Grossman says electronic devices should be made from the complex hydrocarbon.

Stabilizing Quantum Bits
From ACM Careers

Stabilizing Quantum Bits

MIT researchers have developed a new approach to preserving superposition in a class of quantum devices built from synthetic diamonds. The work could be an important...

When Slower Is Faster
From ACM Careers

When Slower Is Faster

A newly published study claims that communicating vehicles will move more efficiently through intersections without traffic lights than with them. 

The Beginning of the End For Encryption Schemes?
From ACM Careers

The Beginning of the End For Encryption Schemes?

Researchers from MIT and the University of Innsbruck in Austria report that they have designed and built a quantum computer from five atoms in an ion trap.

Computer Science Meets Economics
From ACM Careers

Computer Science Meets Economics

Constantinos Daskalakis adapts techniques from theoretical computer science to game theory.

A New Quantum Approach to Big Data
From ACM Careers

A New Quantum Approach to Big Data

Some problems remain daunting and impractical for the most powerful modern supercomputers. Now, researchers have developed a new approach that would use quantum...
Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account