acm-header
Sign In

Communications of the ACM

News


bg-corner

An edited collection of advanced computing news from Communications of the ACM, ACM TechNews, other ACM resources, and news sites around the Web.


Iraq Emerges From Isolation as Telecommunications Hub
From ACM News

Iraq Emerges From Isolation as Telecommunications Hub

Iraq, cut off from decades of technological progress because of dictatorship, sanctions and wars, recently took a big step out of isolation and into the digital...

A Ballooning Megabyte Budget
From ACM News

A Ballooning Megabyte Budget

Everyone knows how long a minute is.

Seeking Robots to Go Where First Responders Can't
From ACM News

Seeking Robots to Go Where First Responders Can't

In the event of another disaster at a nuclear power plant, the first responders may not be humans but robots.

A Little Device That's Trying to Read Your Thoughts
From ACM News

A Little Device That's Trying to Read Your Thoughts

Already surrounded by machines that allow him, painstakingly, to communicate, the physicist Stephen Hawking last summer donned what looked like a rakish black headband...

The Human Voice, as Game Changer
From ACM News

The Human Voice, as Game Changer

Vlad Sejnoha is talking to the TV again.

Google Begins Testing Its Augmented-Reality Glasses
From ACM News

Google Begins Testing Its Augmented-Reality Glasses

If you venture into a coffee shop in the coming months and see someone with a pair of futuristic glasses that look like a prop from "Star Trek," don’t worry.

Giving Women the Access Code
From ACM Careers

Giving Women the Access Code

When Maria Klawe became president of Harvey Mudd College in 2006, she was dismayed— but not surprised—at how few women were majoring in computer science.

Police Are Using Phone Tracking as a Routine Tool
From ACM News

Police Are Using Phone Tracking as a Routine Tool

Law enforcement tracking of cellphones, once the province mainly of federal agents, has become a powerful and widely used surveillance tool for local police officials...

Computer Science For the Rest of ­S
From ACM Careers

Computer Science For the Rest of ­S

Reading, writing, and—refactoring code?

Genius and Tragedy at Dawn of Computer Age
From ACM News

Genius and Tragedy at Dawn of Computer Age

One of the many myths about Apple is that the company's name is a reference to the half-eaten apple reportedly found beside the corpse of the British computer scientist...

Just the Facts. Yes, All of Them.
From ACM News

Just the Facts. Yes, All of Them.

AT 7 years old, Gilad Elbaz wrote, "I want to be a rich mathematician and very smart." That, he figured, would help him "discover things like time machines, robots...

The Soul of the New Hacktivist
From ACM News

The Soul of the New Hacktivist

In 1988, a Cornell graduate student, Robert Tappan Morris, let loose a computer worm on the fledgling version of the Internet. He said it was meant to be an experiment...

The Snails of War
From ACM News

The Snails of War

The electric snail is here. There's an electric cockroach too.

Bypassing the Password
From ACM TechNews

Bypassing the Password

The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency wants to see an alternative to passwords and is supporting work that would confirm a computer user's identity...

New Interest in Hacking as Threat to Security
From ACM News

New Interest in Hacking as Threat to Security

During the five-month period between October and February, there were 86 reported attacks on computer systems in the United States that control critical infrastructure...

Life on Mars? Funds to Find Answer Fade
From ACM News

Life on Mars? Funds to Find Answer Fade

Just as NASA is on the cusp of answering the most fascinating questions about Mars—is there, was there or could there be life there?—the money needed to provide...

Automatic Recharging, From a Distance
From ACM News

Automatic Recharging, From a Distance

Think how convenient it would be if you could recharge electronic devices without ever having to plug them in—or even take them out of your briefcase.

The First Google Maps War
From ACM News

The First Google Maps War

Did Google Maps almost cause a war in 2010? On Nov. 3 of that year, Edén Pastora, the Nicaraguan official tasked with dredging the Rio San Juan, justified his country's...

The Bright Side of Being Hacked
From ACM News

The Bright Side of Being Hacked

Hackers operating under the banner Anonymous have been poking a finger in the eye of one private company after another for two years now.  

Et Tu, Google? Android Apps Can Also Secretly Copy Photos
From ACM News

Et Tu, Google? Android Apps Can Also Secretly Copy Photos

It's not just Apple. Photos are vulnerable on Android phones, too.
Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account