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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.


Opening Doors to Foldable Electronics With Inkjet-Printed Graphene
From ACM TechNews

Opening Doors to Foldable Electronics With Inkjet-Printed Graphene

Researchers have used a highly conductive, bendable graphene-based ink to inkjet-print graphene patterns that could be used as conductive electrodes. 

Inside Google's Secret Lab
From ACM Careers

Inside Google's Secret Lab

Last February, Astro Teller, the director of Google's secretive research lab, Google X, went to seek approval from Chief Executive Officer Larry Page for an unlikely...

German Railways to Test Anti-Graffiti Drones
From ACM News

German Railways to Test Anti-Graffiti Drones

The idea is to use airborne infra-red cameras to collect evidence, which could then be used to prosecute vandals who deface property at night.

Century-Old Science Helps Confirm Global Warming
From ACM News

Century-Old Science Helps Confirm Global Warming

A new NASA and university analysis of ocean data collected more than 135 years ago by the crew of the HMS Challenger oceanographic expedition provides further confirmation...

Quantum Or Not, New Supercomputer Is Certainly Something Else
From ACM News

Quantum Or Not, New Supercomputer Is Certainly Something Else

It's exactly the sort of futuristic thinking you'd expect from Google and NASA: Late last week, the organizations announced a partnership to build a Quantum Artificial...

Building Supercomputers with Raspberries
From ACM News

Building Supercomputers with Raspberries

At some point in the not-too-distant future, building powerful, miniature computing systems will be considered a hobby for high schoolers, just as robotics or even...

Rice Unveils Method For Tailoring Optical Processors
From ACM TechNews

Rice Unveils Method For Tailoring Optical Processors

Rice University researchers have developed a method for arranging metal nanoparticles in geometric patterns that can act as optical processors. 

Marketing to the Big Data Inside ­S
From ACM News

Marketing to the Big Data Inside ­S

Companies market to you according to your shopping habits, your age, your salary, and your social-media activities. In the future, they may be able to advertise...

Hackers Find China Is Land of Opportunity
From ACM Careers

Hackers Find China Is Land of Opportunity

Name a target anywhere in China, an official at a state-owned company boasted recently, and his crack staff will break into that person's computer, download the...

New Technique May Open ­p an Era of Atomic-Scale Semiconductor Devices
From ACM TechNews

New Technique May Open ­p an Era of Atomic-Scale Semiconductor Devices

A new technique can create high-quality semiconductor thin films only one atom thick. 

Innovation Could Bring Flexible Solar Cells, Transistors, Displays
From ACM TechNews

Innovation Could Bring Flexible Solar Cells, Transistors, Displays

Researchers have developed a type of transparent electrode that could be used in solar cells, flexible displays, and future optoelectronic circuits. 

Energy-Efficient Computing Work Earns Science Foundation's Support
From ACM TechNews

Energy-Efficient Computing Work Earns Science Foundation's Support

Arizona State University professor Carole-Jean Wu is researching how to convert waste heat in computing systems to usable electricity.

What Will Hackers Do with the New Kinect?
From ACM Careers

What Will Hackers Do with the New Kinect?

Microsoft announced a new version of the Xbox One earlier this week, and with it an improved and essentially reinvented version of Kinect, the company's body- and...

One Day Your Phone Will Know If You're Happy or Sad
From ACM Careers

One Day Your Phone Will Know If You're Happy or Sad

As much time as we spend with our cell phones and laptops and tablets, it's still pretty much a one-way relationship.

Computer Brain Escapes Google's X Lab to Supercharge Search
From ACM Careers

Computer Brain Escapes Google's X Lab to Supercharge Search

Two years ago Stanford professor Andrew Ng joined Google's X Lab, the research group that's given us Google Glass and the company's driverless cars. His mission...

From ACM Careers

40 Years Ago, Ethernet's Fathers Were the Startup Kids

Bob Metcalfe, Dave Boggs, and the rest of the scientists at Xerox Palo Alto Research Center in 1973 were a lot like young developers at a Silicon Valley startup...

Stacking 2-D Materials Produces Surprising Results
From ACM TechNews

Stacking 2-D Materials Produces Surprising Results

Researchers have made progress on the longstanding challenge of developing a band gap property in graphene, essential for using the material to make transistors...

Is This Virtual Worm the First Sign of the Singularity?
From ACM News

Is This Virtual Worm the First Sign of the Singularity?

For all the talk of artificial intelligence and all the games of SimCity that have been played, no one in the world can actually simulate living things. Biology...

The Audacious Plan to End Hunger with 3D Printed Food
From ACM News

The Audacious Plan to End Hunger with 3D Printed Food

Anjan Contractor's 3D food printer might evoke visions of the "replicator" popularized in Star Trek, from which Captain Picard was constantly interrupting himself...

How to Hack a Nation's Infrastructure
From ACM News

How to Hack a Nation's Infrastructure

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