From ACM Careers
Canonical's Open Documentation Academy aims to help newcomers participate in the open source community, offering mentorship and…
BNN| February 28, 2024
Humanity has fallen to artificial intelligence in checkers, chess, and, last month, Go, the complex ancient Chinese board game.The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | April 25, 2016
Alphabet Inc.'s Google is using its Android mobile operating system and algorithmic smarts to predict users' wants and needs.The Wall Street Journal From ACM Careers | January 14, 2016
A new center to study the implications of artificial intelligence and try to influence its ethical development has been established at the U.K.'s Cambridge University...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | December 3, 2015
A new generation of robots is on the way—smarter, more mobile, more collaborative and more adaptable.The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | June 4, 2015
Six months ago, Chinese Internet-search giant Baidu signaled its ambitions to innovate by opening an artificial-intelligence center in Silicon Valley, in Google's...The Wall Street Journal From ACM Opinion | November 21, 2014
Say you're an executive running an online marketing campaign for a new car, and you want to figure out which consumers in which parts of the country are likely...The Wall Street Journal From ACM Careers | September 16, 2014
Scientists can't seem to agree on what a quantum computer is. But the uncertainty hasn't deterred Google from backing a second major effort in the field.The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | September 3, 2014
Ray Kurzweil is teaching computers how to read better—one more step in the march of technological progress.The Wall Street Journal From ACM Opinion | June 2, 2014
On a dark and stormy night two weeks ago in Schenectady, N.Y., Ken Hislop was relaxing at home when his cellphone suddenly began buzzing in his pocket. It was an...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | June 17, 2013
I was strolling down the hall to a meeting on a Wednesday afternoon when I suddenly blacked out, coming to a halt.The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | August 10, 2012