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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.


Rutgers Engineers Design Cell Phone App to Reduce Distracted Driving
From ACM TechNews

Rutgers Engineers Design Cell Phone App to Reduce Distracted Driving

Researchers at Rutgers University and the Stevens Institute of Technology have developed a smartphone application that can identify where a cell phone user is sitting...

Lasers, Cameras, and Particle Detectors: Mars Rover's Super High-Tech Science Gear
From ACM News

Lasers, Cameras, and Particle Detectors: Mars Rover's Super High-Tech Science Gear

Assuming it safely passes through its terrifying and complex descent sequence, NASA's newest rover, Curiosity, should get its wheels on the Martian surface in just...

Microsoft Seeks to Make Sense of What You Didn't Say
From ACM TechNews

Microsoft Seeks to Make Sense of What You Didn't Say

Scientists at Microsoft and the International Computer Science Institute, which is affiliated with the University of California, Berkeley, are researching how to...

Deborah Estrin Calls For CS Research on Sustainability
From ACM News

Deborah Estrin Calls For CS Research on Sustainability

The old adage, “You can’t manage what you can’t measure,” applies to how both networking and sensor technology can help address problems of sustainability, says...

An App That Could Stop Traffic
From ACM TechNews

An App That Could Stop Traffic

German researchers have developed Greenway, a Windows phone application designed to help people avoid traffic jams and get drivers from one point to another in...

Crowd Sourcing Comes to Astronomy
From ACM TechNews

Crowd Sourcing Comes to Astronomy

Astronomers have reconstructed the orbit of the Holmes comet, which flew by Earth in 2007, using photos from the Internet.  

From ACM TechNews

Computers Not Yet Able to ­nderstand Human Speech

Cornell University professor Lillian Lee discusses the progress in natural language processing and machine learning and the challenges that lie ahead.  

At Getty Museum, Revelations of Art via Tech
From ACM News

At Getty Museum, Revelations of Art via Tech

Walking through gallery after gallery of classical European paintings, sculptures, and other antiquities at the J. Paul Getty Museum here, it's easy to get lost...

Device Helps Eyes Do the Write Thing
From ACM TechNews

Device Helps Eyes Do the Write Thing

French National Center for Scientific Research director Jean Lorenceau has developed a device that enables users to write with their eyes in cursive script on a...

Angry Birds Meets Bioinformatics
From ACM TechNews

Angry Birds Meets Bioinformatics

UAB researchers have developed ImageJS, a free smartphone application system that enables pathologists to drag a digitized pathology slide into a Web app and analyze...

Timing Is Everything For the Games' Chief Timer
From ACM Opinion

Timing Is Everything For the Games' Chief Timer

Timing is everything for Peter Hürzeler, a man for whom "good enough" simply isn't.

Advertising Gets Personal
From Communications of the ACM

Advertising Gets Personal

Online behavioral advertising and sophisticated data aggregation have changed the face of advertising and put privacy in the crosshairs.

DARPA Shredder Challenge Solved
From Communications of the ACM

DARPA Shredder Challenge Solved

The eight-person winning team used original computer algorithms to narrow the search space and then relied on human observation to move the pieces into their final...

Cosmic Simulations
From Communications of the ACM

Cosmic Simulations

With the help of supercomputers, scientists are now able to create models of large-scale astronomical events.

Nothing But Net? Basketball Science Has More Answers
From ACM News

Nothing But Net? Basketball Science Has More Answers

In a multibillion-dollar sport like basketball, one might expect that trainers had figured out every nuance of aerodynamics, mechanics and all things Newtonian...

Mystery Tug on Spacecraft Is Einstein's 'i Told You So'
From ACM News

Mystery Tug on Spacecraft Is Einstein's 'i Told You So'

It's been a bad year to bet against Albert Einstein.

Top Five 'earth as Art' Winners
From ACM News

Top Five 'earth as Art' Winners

During a span of 40 years, since 1972, the Landsat series of Earth observation satellites has become a vital reference worldwide for understanding scientific issues...

From ACM News

In First, Software Emulates Lifespan of Entire Organism

Scientists at Stanford University and the J. Craig Venter Institute have developed the first software simulation of an entire organism, a humble single-cell bacterium...

Coning In: New Ways to Tap Old Data Boost Hurricane Forecast Accuracy
From ACM News

Coning In: New Ways to Tap Old Data Boost Hurricane Forecast Accuracy

Despite advances in weather prediction technology, meteorologists must still qualify any hurricane forecasts with a "cone of uncertainty," which depicts just how...

Study: Wikileaked Data Can Predict Insurgent Attacks
From ACM News

Study: Wikileaked Data Can Predict Insurgent Attacks

Insurgencies are amongst the hardest conflicts to predict. Insurgents can be loosely organized, split into factions, and strike from out of nowhere. But now researchers...
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