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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.


Museums Go High-Tech with Digital Forensics
From Communications of the ACM

Museums Go High-Tech with Digital Forensics

Scientists are using cutting-edge scanning and visualization techniques to wow visitors and find new stories in ancient artifacts.

The New Digital Medicine
From Communications of the ACM

The New Digital Medicine

Affordable, connected, personal medical devices are slowly changing the nature of health care.

The Power of Memory
From Communications of the ACM

The Power of Memory

In-memory databases promise speedier processing.

Weathering a New Era of Big Data
From Communications of the ACM

Weathering a New Era of Big Data

Increased computing power combined with new and more advanced models are changing weather forecasting.

The Solace of Oblivion
From ACM News

The Solace of Oblivion

October 31, 2006, an eighteen-year-old woman named Nikki Catsouras slammed her father's sports car into the side of a concrete toll booth in Orange County, California...

Tiny Robot Learns to Fly a Real Plane
From ACM News

Tiny Robot Learns to Fly a Real Plane

A small, hobby-sized robot could herald the pilot of the future.

New Rfid Technology Helps Robots Find Household Objects
From ACM News

New Rfid Technology Helps Robots Find Household Objects

Mobile robots could be much more useful in homes, if they could locate people, places and objects.

Scientists Make Quantum Leap, Teleport Data from Light to Matter
From ACM News

Scientists Make Quantum Leap, Teleport Data from Light to Matter

We're one step closer to creating the Ansible communicator in "Ender's Game," the warp drive envisioned by Mexican physicist Miguel Alcubierre and a "Star Trek"...

Robots That Learn Through Repetition, Not Programming
From ACM News

Robots That Learn Through Repetition, Not Programming

Eugene Izhikevich thinks you shouldn't have to write code in order to teach robots new tricks.

New Smartphone App Gives Sight to the Blind
From ACM Careers

New Smartphone App Gives Sight to the Blind

Jonathan Mosen, who has been blind since birth, spent his evening snapping photos of packages in the mail, his son's school report and labels on bottles in the...

Gaze-Tracker Lets You Connect to Devices with a Glance
From ACM News

Gaze-Tracker Lets You Connect to Devices with a Glance

An eye-tracking camera calculates where the wearer is looking, and transmits it to all the nearby Internet-connected devices, such as stereos and TVs, via Wi-Fi...

Oculus Brings the Virtual Closer to Reality
From ACM News

Oculus Brings the Virtual Closer to Reality

Virtual reality is virtually here—although its first incarnation will come with short battery life, images that do not quite track eye movements and a tendency...

A Newspaper's First Trip Into Virtual Reality Goes to a Desolate Farm
From ACM News

A Newspaper's First Trip Into Virtual Reality Goes to a Desolate Farm

Against the odds, the Des Moines Register has just become one of the first newspapers to move into virtual reality.

The History of the Predator, the Drone that Changed the World
From ACM Opinion

The History of the Predator, the Drone that Changed the World

These days, the word drone is used to refer to just about any kind of remote-controlled, unmanned aircraft.

The Hidden World of Facebook 'like Farms'
From ACM News

The Hidden World of Facebook 'like Farms'

Facebook has become the advertising outlet of choice for many of the world’s businesses and companies.

How Two Men ­nlocked Modern Encryption
From ACM Careers

How Two Men ­nlocked Modern Encryption

In September of 1974, when he was 30 years old, Whitfield Diffie was obsessed with cryptography.

Making Big Data Think Bigger
From ACM TechNews

Making Big Data Think Bigger

Big-data management will create a significant shift in the way decisions are made, as new sources of data are mined for patterns. 

Quick-Change Materials Break the Silicon Speed Limit For Computers
From ACM TechNews

Quick-Change Materials Break the Silicon Speed Limit For Computers

New phase-change materials-based devices can be melted and recrystallized in as little as half a nanosecond using appropriate voltage pulses. 

What's the Next Big Tech Trend? This Federal Agency Thinks It Can Predict the Answer
From ACM TechNews

What's the Next Big Tech Trend? This Federal Agency Thinks It Can Predict the Answer

The U.S. Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity  is using machine intelligence to predict what emerging technologies will become popular in the future...

Time Dilation Measured at 40 Percent of the Speed of Light—in the Lab
From ACM News

Time Dilation Measured at 40 Percent of the Speed of Light—in the Lab

Einstein is most famous for general relativity, which is really a theory of gravity.
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