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


How Much Smaller Can Chips Go?
From ACM News

How Much Smaller Can Chips Go?

Seven of the finest minds Intel can muster are lined up on stage, ready to take questions from a pack of visibly intimidated European journalists.

Finding Our Way with Digital Bread Crumbs
From ACM News

Finding Our Way with Digital Bread Crumbs

A Microsoft research project explores whether sensors in mobile devices could help us navigate without GPS.

How the Internet Is Changing Language
From ACM News

How the Internet Is Changing Language

"To Google" has become a universally understood verb, and many countries are developing their own Internet slang. But is the Web changing language, and is everyone...

Researchers Develop Ultrahigh Energy Density Supercapacitors
From ACM News

Researchers Develop Ultrahigh Energy Density Supercapacitors

A team of researchers from the United States and France have developed micro-supercapacitors with the potential to power nomad electronics, wireless sensor networks...

A New Kind of Microchip
From ACM News

A New Kind of Microchip

A computer chip that performs calculations using probabilities, instead of binary logic, could accelerate everything from online banking systems to the flash memory...

Tcs to Offer Cheap Cloud Computing Service in India
From ACM News

Tcs to Offer Cheap Cloud Computing Service in India

TCS plans to launch an affordable cloud computing service to small and medium businesses in India. The service is expected to be launched by mid-September.

From ACM TechNews

Survey: Broadband Growth Slowing in the US

Broadband adoption in the United States is slowing, according to a survey by the Pew Research Center. The number of U.S. residents with broadband Internet service...

Innovation Could Bring Super-Accurate Sensors, Crime Forensics
From ACM TechNews

Innovation Could Bring Super-Accurate Sensors, Crime Forensics

Purdue researchers have developed technology that enables microelectromechanical systems to self-calibrate, which they say could lead to super-accurate sensors...

Cult of Less: Living Out of a Hard Drive
From ACM News

Cult of Less: Living Out of a Hard Drive

Many have begun trading in CD, DVD, and book collections for digital music, movies, and e-books. But this trend in digital technology is now influencing some...

Software Predicts Criminal Behavior
From ACM News

Software Predicts Criminal Behavior

Algorithm could influence sentencing recommendations and bail amounts.

Is Sending Signals to Aliens Really a Good Idea?
From ACM News

Is Sending Signals to Aliens Really a Good Idea?

If we are not alone in the universe, then—considering what happened to the Indians after Columbus landed in America—shouldn't we be keeping a pretty low profile...

From ACM News

Top It Jobs For 2010 and Beyond

The economy is picking up (albeit more slowly than we would like) and employers are hiring again (though we will hope the pace increases and not have the larger...

From ACM News

Tech Guilt: 5 'persuasive' Technologies to Help You Be Good

Information is power, but does information—by itself—actually make people change their behavior?

New System Tests and Evaluates High-Energy Laser Weapons
From ACM News

New System Tests and Evaluates High-Energy Laser Weapons

A system developed by the Georgia Tech Research Institute that can measure the power and spatial energy distribution of high-energy lasers will help accelerate...

From ACM News

World Record Data Density for Ferroelectric Recording

Scientists in Japan have recorded data at a density of 4 trillion bits per square inch, a world record for the experimental "ferroelectric" data storage method....

From ACM News

Wto Backs ­.s., Japan Complaint Over Eu Import Duties on Electronic Goods

The European Union broke global trade laws by imposing import duties on $11 billion of high-tech electronic goods such as computer monitors, the World Trade Organization...

Researchers Control Collective Spin States Electrically at Room Temperature
From ACM News

Researchers Control Collective Spin States Electrically at Room Temperature

Physicists at the University of Nebraska Lincoln have changed the orientation of a  large number of electron spins collectively at room temperature by pure electrical...

From ACM News

Step 1: Post Elusive Proof. Step 2: Watch Fireworks.

 The potential of Internet-based collaboration was vividly demonstrated this month when complexity theorists used blogs and wikis to pounce on a claimed proof for...

Courses Charge Up Future Electric-Vehicle Engineers
From ACM News

Courses Charge Up Future Electric-Vehicle Engineers

When Professor Mehdi Ferdowsi and Ph.D. student Andrew Meintz offered the inaugural class on electric and hybrid vehicles at Missouri University of Science and...

Building a Cloud Out of Smart Phones
From ACM TechNews

Building a Cloud Out of Smart Phones

An international group of researchers has developed Misco, a version of Google's MapReduce algorithm powered by cell phones in a self-contained cloud computing...
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